Tropical Medicine and Infectious Disease (Nov 2023)

The Distribution of Eight Antimicrobial Resistance Genes in <i>Streptococcus oralis</i>, <i>Streptococcus sanguinis</i>, and <i>Streptococcus gordonii</i> Strains Isolated from Dental Plaque as Oral Commensals

  • Verónica Morales-Dorantes,
  • Rubén Abraham Domínguez-Pérez,
  • Rosa Martha Pérez-Serrano,
  • Juan Carlos Solís-Sainz,
  • Pablo García-Solís,
  • León Francisco Espinosa-Cristóbal,
  • Claudia Verónica Cabeza-Cabrera,
  • José Luis Ayala-Herrera

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/tropicalmed8110499
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 11
p. 499

Abstract

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It has been proposed that oral commensal bacteria are potential reservoirs of a wide variety of antimicrobial resistance genes (ARGs) and could be the source of pathogenic bacteria; however, there is scarce information regarding this. In this study, three common streptococci of the mitis group (S. oralis, S. sanguinis, and S. gordonii) isolated from dental plaque (DP) were screened to identify if they were frequent reservoirs of specific ARGs (blaTEM, cfxA, tetM, tetW, tetQ, ermA, ermB, and ermC). DP samples were collected from 80 adults; one part of the sample was cultured, and from the other part DNA was obtained for first screening of the three streptococci species and the ARGs of interest. Selected samples were plated and colonies were selected for molecular identification. Thirty identified species were screened for the presence of the ARGs. From those selected, all of the S. sanguinis and S. oralis carried at least three, while only 30% of S. gordonii strains carried three or more. The most prevalent were tetM in 73%, and blaTEM and tetW both in 66.6%. On the other hand, ermA and cfxA were not present. Oral streptococci from the mitis group could be considered frequent reservoirs of specifically tetM, blaTEM, and tetW. In contrast, these three species appear not to be reservoirs of ermA and cfxA.

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