Veterinary Sciences (Jun 2022)

Phenotypic and Genotypic Screening of Colistin Resistance Associated with Emerging Pathogenic <i>Escherichia coli</i> Isolated from Poultry

  • Heba Badr,
  • Abdelhafez Samir,
  • Essam Ismail El-Tokhi,
  • Momtaz A. Shahein,
  • Flourage M. Rady,
  • Ashraf S. Hakim,
  • Ehab Ali Fouad,
  • Engy Farahat El-Sady,
  • Samah F. Ali

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/vetsci9060282
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 6
p. 282

Abstract

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Chickens continue to be an important reservoir of zoonotic multidrug-resistant illnesses. Antimicrobial resistance correlated with colistin has emerged as a critical concern worldwide in the veterinary field and the public health sector. The current study investigated the prevalence of multidrug-resistant avian pathogenic Escherichia coli among chicken farms in three Egyptian governorates, focusing on colistin resistance assessment. A total of 56 Escherichia coli isolates were recovered out of 120 pooled samples obtained from diseased chicken broilers (46.7%). The E. coli isolates were serotyped to nine different serotypes; the highest incidence was for O125 (n = 18). The E. coli isolates demonstrated multidrug-resistant patterns against 10 antibiotics, especially clindamycin, tetracycline, streptomycin and ampicillin, by 100, 100, 96.4 and 92.9%, respectively. On the other hand, colistin resistance was 41.1% using AST. All E. coli isolates displayed positive colistin resistance growth on chromogenic medium, but only 25% represented this positivity via MIC estimation and Sensititre kit. PCR results revealed that all isolates harbored mcr-1, but no isolates harbored the other 2–5 mcr genes. In conclusion, the study demonstrated the emergence of multidrug-resistant, especially colistin-resistant, E. coli among chicken broiler flocks, and mcr-1 is the master gene of the colistin resistance feature.

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