Centralized industrialization of pork in Europe and America contributes to the global spread of Salmonella enterica.
Heng LiYilei WuDan FengQuangui JiangShengkai LiJie RongLing ZhongUlrich MethnerLaura BaxterSascha OttDaniel FalushZhenpeng LiXiangyu DengXin LuYi RenBiao KanZhemin ZhouPublished in: Nature food (2024)
Salmonella enterica causes severe food-borne infections through contamination of the food supply chain. Its evolution has been associated with human activities, especially animal husbandry. Advances in intensive farming and global transportation have substantially reshaped the pig industry, but their impact on the evolution of associated zoonotic pathogens such as S. enterica remains unresolved. Here we investigated the population fluctuation, accumulation of antimicrobial resistance genes and international serovar Choleraesuis transmission of nine pig-enriched S. enterica populations comprising more than 9,000 genomes. Most changes were found to be attributable to the developments of the modern pig industry. All pig-enriched salmonellae experienced host transfers in pigs and/or population expansions over the past century, with pigs and pork having become the main sources of S. enterica transmissions to other hosts. Overall, our analysis revealed strong associations between the transmission of pig-enriched salmonellae and the global pork trade.