Gut Commensal Escherichia coli, a High-Risk Reservoir of Transferable Plasmid-Mediated Antimicrobial Resistance Traits
Date
16/03/2022
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Type
Article
Publisher
Dove press
Series Info
Infection and Drug Resistance;2022:15 1077–1091
Scientific Journal Rankings
Abstract
Background: Escherichia coli (E. coli), the main human gut microorganism, is one of the evolved superbugs because of acquiring
antimicrobial resistance (AMR) determinants via horizontal gene transfer (HGT).
Purpose: This study aimed to screen isolates of gut commensal E. coli from healthy adult individuals for antimicrobial susceptibility
and plasmid-mediated AMR encoding genes.
Methods: Gut commensal E. coli bacteria were isolated from fecal samples that were taken from healthy adult individuals and
investigated phenotypically for their antimicrobial susceptibility against diverse classes of antimicrobials using the Kirby Bauer disc
method. PCR-based molecular assays were carried out to detect diverse plasmid-carried AMR encoding genes and virulence genes of
different E. coli pathotypes (eaeA, stx, ipaH, est, elt, aggR and pCVD432). The examined AMR genes were β-lactam resistance encoding
genes (blaCTX-M1, blaTEM, blaCMY-2), tetracycline resistance encoding genes (tetA, tetB), sulfonamides resistance encoding genes (sul1,
sulII), aminoglycoside resistance encoding genes (aac(3)-II, aac(6′)-Ib-cr) and quinolones resistance encoding genes (qnrA, qnrB, qnrS).
Results: PCR results revealed the absence of pathotypes genes in 56 isolates that were considered gut commensal isolates. E. coli
isolates showed high resistance rates against tested antimicrobial agents belonging to both β-lactams and sulfonamides (42/56, 75%)
followed by quinolones (35/56, 62.5%), tetracyclines (31/56, 55.4%), while the lowest resistance rate was to aminoglycosides (24/56,
42.9%). Antimicrobial susceptibility profiles revealed that 64.3% of isolates were multidrug-resistant (MDR). High prevalence
frequencies of plasmid-carried AMR genes were detected including blaTEM (64%) sulI (60.7%), qnrA (51.8%), aac(3)-II (37.5%),
and tetA (46.4%). All isolates harbored more than one gene with the most frequent genetic profile among isolates was blaTEM-blaCTX-
M1-like-qnrA-qnrB-tetA-sulI.
Conclusion: Results are significant in the evaluation of plasmid-carried AMR genes in the human gut commensal E. coli, suggesting
a potential human health risk and the necessity of strict regulation of the use of antibiotics in Egypt. Commensal E. coli bacteria may
constitute a potential reservoir of AMR genes that can be transferred to other bacterial species.
Description
Keywords
gut microorganisms, antibiotic resistance, plasmid, MDR, resistance genes