Molecular analysis of florfenicol-resistant bacteria isolated from drinking water distribution systems in Southwestern Nigeria

Objectives: Use of chloramphenicol or its veterinary analogue florfenicol can selectively favour antibiotic-resistant bacteria. Understanding how resistance is mobilised and disseminated among pathogens is vital in knowing how different bacterial taxa might serve as reservoirs of these genes for pat...

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Main Authors: Ayodele. T. Adesoji, Douglas R. Call
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2020-12-01
Series:Journal of Global Antimicrobial Resistance
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2213716520302666
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spelling doaj-2d2fc6b3fe9645208146f337e36398d42021-05-21T04:21:10ZengElsevierJournal of Global Antimicrobial Resistance2213-71652020-12-0123340344Molecular analysis of florfenicol-resistant bacteria isolated from drinking water distribution systems in Southwestern NigeriaAyodele. T. Adesoji0Douglas R. Call1Department of Microbiology, Federal University Dutsin-Ma, Katsina State, Nigeria; Corresponding author.Paul G. Allen School for Global Animal Health, Washington State University, Pullman, WA, USAObjectives: Use of chloramphenicol or its veterinary analogue florfenicol can selectively favour antibiotic-resistant bacteria. Understanding how resistance is mobilised and disseminated among pathogens is vital in knowing how different bacterial taxa might serve as reservoirs of these genes for pathogenic bacteria. Methods: Bacterial isolates (n = 30) were selected on the basis of multidrug resistance and resistance to florfenicol from among 296 bacteria originally isolated from drinking water distribution systems in Southwestern Nigeria. Bacterial identification, minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) determination for florfenicol, PCR detection of florfenicol resistance genes (floR, fexA and cfx) and sequence analysis were employed to characterise the isolates. Results: According to sequence data (16S rDNA, v2–v3 region), 30 strains were selected, includingPseudomonas spp. (43.3%), Serratia spp. (13.3%), Proteus spp. (26.7%), Acinetobacter spp. (13.3%) and Providencia rettgeri (3.3%). MICs ranged between >16 μg/mL and >1024 μg/mL. floR was the only resistance gene detected (11/30; 36.7%). The majority of floR-positive isolates (8/11; 72.7%) were Proteus spp. All floR sequences shared 100% identity and 1–2 synonymous substitutions relative to other published sequences. Conclusions: floR-positive strains in this study were originally selected randomly without antibiotics. Finding floR in four genera without selective enrichment is consistent with widespread distribution of this resistance trait in drinking water systems in Nigeria. Further work is needed to determine whether human and veterinary antibiotic use practices in Nigeria are contributing to proliferation of this important antibiotic resistance trait and to determine whether the presence of floR-producing strains is compromising human and animal health.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2213716520302666floRAntibiotic resistancePathogensSequencingWater distribution system
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ayodele. T. Adesoji
Douglas R. Call
spellingShingle Ayodele. T. Adesoji
Douglas R. Call
Molecular analysis of florfenicol-resistant bacteria isolated from drinking water distribution systems in Southwestern Nigeria
Journal of Global Antimicrobial Resistance
floR
Antibiotic resistance
Pathogens
Sequencing
Water distribution system
author_facet Ayodele. T. Adesoji
Douglas R. Call
author_sort Ayodele. T. Adesoji
title Molecular analysis of florfenicol-resistant bacteria isolated from drinking water distribution systems in Southwestern Nigeria
title_short Molecular analysis of florfenicol-resistant bacteria isolated from drinking water distribution systems in Southwestern Nigeria
title_full Molecular analysis of florfenicol-resistant bacteria isolated from drinking water distribution systems in Southwestern Nigeria
title_fullStr Molecular analysis of florfenicol-resistant bacteria isolated from drinking water distribution systems in Southwestern Nigeria
title_full_unstemmed Molecular analysis of florfenicol-resistant bacteria isolated from drinking water distribution systems in Southwestern Nigeria
title_sort molecular analysis of florfenicol-resistant bacteria isolated from drinking water distribution systems in southwestern nigeria
publisher Elsevier
series Journal of Global Antimicrobial Resistance
issn 2213-7165
publishDate 2020-12-01
description Objectives: Use of chloramphenicol or its veterinary analogue florfenicol can selectively favour antibiotic-resistant bacteria. Understanding how resistance is mobilised and disseminated among pathogens is vital in knowing how different bacterial taxa might serve as reservoirs of these genes for pathogenic bacteria. Methods: Bacterial isolates (n = 30) were selected on the basis of multidrug resistance and resistance to florfenicol from among 296 bacteria originally isolated from drinking water distribution systems in Southwestern Nigeria. Bacterial identification, minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) determination for florfenicol, PCR detection of florfenicol resistance genes (floR, fexA and cfx) and sequence analysis were employed to characterise the isolates. Results: According to sequence data (16S rDNA, v2–v3 region), 30 strains were selected, includingPseudomonas spp. (43.3%), Serratia spp. (13.3%), Proteus spp. (26.7%), Acinetobacter spp. (13.3%) and Providencia rettgeri (3.3%). MICs ranged between >16 μg/mL and >1024 μg/mL. floR was the only resistance gene detected (11/30; 36.7%). The majority of floR-positive isolates (8/11; 72.7%) were Proteus spp. All floR sequences shared 100% identity and 1–2 synonymous substitutions relative to other published sequences. Conclusions: floR-positive strains in this study were originally selected randomly without antibiotics. Finding floR in four genera without selective enrichment is consistent with widespread distribution of this resistance trait in drinking water systems in Nigeria. Further work is needed to determine whether human and veterinary antibiotic use practices in Nigeria are contributing to proliferation of this important antibiotic resistance trait and to determine whether the presence of floR-producing strains is compromising human and animal health.
topic floR
Antibiotic resistance
Pathogens
Sequencing
Water distribution system
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2213716520302666
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