Virulence and antibiotic resistance profile of avian Escherichia coli strains isolated from colibacillosis lesions in central of Algeria

Background and Aim: Avian pathogenic Escherichia coli cause extensive mortality in poultry flocks, leading to extensive economic losses. To date, in Algeria, little information has been available on virulence potential and antibiotics resistance of avian E. coli isolates. Therefore, the aim of this...

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Main Authors: Nacima Meguenni, Nathalie Chanteloup, Angelina Tourtereau, Chafika Ali Ahmed, Saliha Bounar-Kechih, Catherine Schouler
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Veterinary World 2019-11-01
Series:Veterinary World
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Online Access:http://www.veterinaryworld.org/Vol.12/November-2019/21.pdf
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spelling doaj-6b7302edf88d4585b41c1586fe2b17c42021-08-02T08:25:16ZengVeterinary WorldVeterinary World0972-89882231-09162019-11-0112111840184810.14202/vetworld.2019.1840-1848Virulence and antibiotic resistance profile of avian Escherichia coli strains isolated from colibacillosis lesions in central of AlgeriaNacima Meguenni0Nathalie Chanteloup1Angelina Tourtereau2Chafika Ali Ahmed3Saliha Bounar-Kechih4Catherine Schouler5Laboratory of Analytic Biochemistry and Biotechnology, Mouloud Mammeri University, Tizi Ouzou 15000, Algeria.ISP, INRA, Université de Tours, UMR 1282, 37 380, Nouzilly, France.ISP, INRA, Université de Tours, UMR 1282, 37 380, Nouzilly, France.Laboratory of Analytic Biochemistry and Biotechnology, Mouloud Mammeri University, Tizi Ouzou 15000, Algeria.Regional Veterinary Laboratory of Draa Ben Khedda, Tizi Ouzou 15000, Algeria.ISP, INRA, Université de Tours, UMR 1282, 37 380, Nouzilly, France.Background and Aim: Avian pathogenic Escherichia coli cause extensive mortality in poultry flocks, leading to extensive economic losses. To date, in Algeria, little information has been available on virulence potential and antibiotics resistance of avian E. coli isolates. Therefore, the aim of this study was the characterization of virulence genes and antibiotic resistance profile of Algerian E. coli strains isolated from diseased broilers. Materials and Methods: In this study, 43 avian E. coli strains isolated from chicken colibacillosis lesions at different years were analyzed to determine their contents in 10 virulence factors by polymerase chain reaction, antimicrobial susceptibility to 22 antibiotics belonging to six different chemical classes and genomic diversity by pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE). Results: Mainly E. coli isolates (58.1%) carried two at six virulence genes and the most frequent virulence gene association detected were ompT (protectin), hlyF (hemolysin) with 55.8% (p<0.001), and iroN, sitA (iron acquisition/uptake systems), and iss (protectin) with 41.8% (p<0.001). Some strains were diagnosed as virulent according to their virulence gene profile. Indeed, 23.25% of the isolates harbored iroN, ompT, hlyF, iss, and sitA combination, 14% ompT, hlyF, and frzorf4 (sugar metabolism), and 11,6% iroN, hlyF, ompT, iss, iutA (iron acquisition/uptake systems), and frzorf4. The chicken embryo lethality assay performed on five isolates confirmed the potential virulence of these strains. All isolates submitted to PFGE analysis yielded different genetic profiles, which revealed their diversity. Overall, 97.2% of the isolates were resistant to at least one antibiotic and 53.5% demonstrated multi-antimicrobial resistance to three different antimicrobial classes. The highest resistance levels were against nalidixic acid (83.4%), amoxicillin and ampicillin (83.3%), ticarcillin (80.5%), pipemidic acid (75%), and triméthoprim-sulfamethoxazole (66.6%). For beta-lactam class, the main phenotype observed belonged to broad-spectrum beta-lactamases. However, extended-spectrum beta-lactamase associated with three at six virulence factors was also detected in 13 isolates. Two of them were attested virulent as demonstrated in the embryo lethality test which constitutes a real public threat. Conclusion: It would be imperative in avian production to discourage misuse while maintaining constant vigilance guidelines and regulations, to limit and rationalize antimicrobial use.http://www.veterinaryworld.org/Vol.12/November-2019/21.pdfantibiotic resistanceavian escherichia coliextended-spectrum beta-lactamasevirulence
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Nacima Meguenni
Nathalie Chanteloup
Angelina Tourtereau
Chafika Ali Ahmed
Saliha Bounar-Kechih
Catherine Schouler
spellingShingle Nacima Meguenni
Nathalie Chanteloup
Angelina Tourtereau
Chafika Ali Ahmed
Saliha Bounar-Kechih
Catherine Schouler
Virulence and antibiotic resistance profile of avian Escherichia coli strains isolated from colibacillosis lesions in central of Algeria
Veterinary World
antibiotic resistance
avian escherichia coli
extended-spectrum beta-lactamase
virulence
author_facet Nacima Meguenni
Nathalie Chanteloup
Angelina Tourtereau
Chafika Ali Ahmed
Saliha Bounar-Kechih
Catherine Schouler
author_sort Nacima Meguenni
title Virulence and antibiotic resistance profile of avian Escherichia coli strains isolated from colibacillosis lesions in central of Algeria
title_short Virulence and antibiotic resistance profile of avian Escherichia coli strains isolated from colibacillosis lesions in central of Algeria
title_full Virulence and antibiotic resistance profile of avian Escherichia coli strains isolated from colibacillosis lesions in central of Algeria
title_fullStr Virulence and antibiotic resistance profile of avian Escherichia coli strains isolated from colibacillosis lesions in central of Algeria
title_full_unstemmed Virulence and antibiotic resistance profile of avian Escherichia coli strains isolated from colibacillosis lesions in central of Algeria
title_sort virulence and antibiotic resistance profile of avian escherichia coli strains isolated from colibacillosis lesions in central of algeria
publisher Veterinary World
series Veterinary World
issn 0972-8988
2231-0916
publishDate 2019-11-01
description Background and Aim: Avian pathogenic Escherichia coli cause extensive mortality in poultry flocks, leading to extensive economic losses. To date, in Algeria, little information has been available on virulence potential and antibiotics resistance of avian E. coli isolates. Therefore, the aim of this study was the characterization of virulence genes and antibiotic resistance profile of Algerian E. coli strains isolated from diseased broilers. Materials and Methods: In this study, 43 avian E. coli strains isolated from chicken colibacillosis lesions at different years were analyzed to determine their contents in 10 virulence factors by polymerase chain reaction, antimicrobial susceptibility to 22 antibiotics belonging to six different chemical classes and genomic diversity by pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE). Results: Mainly E. coli isolates (58.1%) carried two at six virulence genes and the most frequent virulence gene association detected were ompT (protectin), hlyF (hemolysin) with 55.8% (p<0.001), and iroN, sitA (iron acquisition/uptake systems), and iss (protectin) with 41.8% (p<0.001). Some strains were diagnosed as virulent according to their virulence gene profile. Indeed, 23.25% of the isolates harbored iroN, ompT, hlyF, iss, and sitA combination, 14% ompT, hlyF, and frzorf4 (sugar metabolism), and 11,6% iroN, hlyF, ompT, iss, iutA (iron acquisition/uptake systems), and frzorf4. The chicken embryo lethality assay performed on five isolates confirmed the potential virulence of these strains. All isolates submitted to PFGE analysis yielded different genetic profiles, which revealed their diversity. Overall, 97.2% of the isolates were resistant to at least one antibiotic and 53.5% demonstrated multi-antimicrobial resistance to three different antimicrobial classes. The highest resistance levels were against nalidixic acid (83.4%), amoxicillin and ampicillin (83.3%), ticarcillin (80.5%), pipemidic acid (75%), and triméthoprim-sulfamethoxazole (66.6%). For beta-lactam class, the main phenotype observed belonged to broad-spectrum beta-lactamases. However, extended-spectrum beta-lactamase associated with three at six virulence factors was also detected in 13 isolates. Two of them were attested virulent as demonstrated in the embryo lethality test which constitutes a real public threat. Conclusion: It would be imperative in avian production to discourage misuse while maintaining constant vigilance guidelines and regulations, to limit and rationalize antimicrobial use.
topic antibiotic resistance
avian escherichia coli
extended-spectrum beta-lactamase
virulence
url http://www.veterinaryworld.org/Vol.12/November-2019/21.pdf
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