Scientific Reports (Apr 2024)

Colostrum as a source of ESBL-Escherichia coli in feces of newborn calves

  • Lisa Bachmann,
  • Laura Weber,
  • Wendy Liermann,
  • Harald M. Hammon,
  • Cora Delling,
  • Franziska Dengler,
  • Katharina Schaufler,
  • Michael Schwabe,
  • Elias Eger,
  • Karsten Becker,
  • Anne Schütz,
  • Timo Homeier-Bachmann

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-024-60461-4
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 1
pp. 1 – 11

Abstract

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Abstract The aim of the present study was to determine if colostrum and the equipment for harvesting and feeding colostrum are sources of fecal ESBL/AmpC-producing Escherichia coli (ESBL/AmpC-E. coli) in calves. Therefore, 15 male calves fed with pooled colostrum on a dairy farm and held individually in an experimental barn, the colostrum pool and the equipment for harvesting and feeding colostrum were sampled and analyzed for the occurrence of ESBL/AmpC-E. coli. The ESBL-AmpC-E. coli suspicious isolates were subjected to whole-genome sequence analysis. Forty-three of 45 fecal samples were tested positive for ESBL/AmpC-E. coli. In the colostrum sample and in the milking pot, we also found ESBL/AmpC-E. coli. All 45 E. coli isolates were ESBL-producers, mainly commensal sequence type (ST) 10, but also human-extraintestinal pathogenic E. coli ST131 and ST117 were found. The clonal identity of six fecal isolates with the ESBL-E. coli isolate from the colostrum and of five fecal isolates with the strain from the milking pot demonstrates that the hygiene of colostrum or the colostrum equipment can play a significant role in the spread of ESBL-E. coli. Effective sanitation procedures for colostrum harvesting and feeding equipment are crucial to reduce the ESBL-E. coli shedding of neonatal dairy calves.