Scientific Reports (Nov 2024)

Detection of carbapenemases in Enterobacterales and other Gram-negative bacilli recovered from hospital and municipal wastewater in Mexico City

  • Maria Magdalena Urzua-Abad,
  • Alejandra Aquino-Andrade,
  • Juan Arturo Castelan-Vega,
  • Jocelin Merida-Vieyra,
  • Rosa Maria Ribas-Aparicio,
  • Laura Belmont-Monroy,
  • Alicia Jimenez-Alberto,
  • Gerardo Aparicio-Ozores

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-024-76824-w
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 1
pp. 1 – 8

Abstract

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Abstract Wastewater serves as a reservoir for antimicrobial-resistant bacteria. This study revealed the presence of carbapenem-resistant and carbapenemase-producing Gram-negative bacilli (GNB), established clonal relationships among isolates in hospital and municipal wastewater, and identified a high-risk clone in municipal wastewater. A total of 63 isolates of GNB were obtained, with Enterobacterales being the most frequently isolated group (62%). Carbapenemase-producing Lelliottia amnigena, Kluyvera cryocrescens, and Shewanella putrefaciens isolates were documented for the first time in Mexico. The detectableted carbapenemase genes were bla KPC (55%), bla NDM (12%), bla VIM−2 (12%), bla OXA−48 (4%), bla GES (2%), bla NDM−1 (2%), and bla NDM−5 (2%). Clonal relationships were observed among Klebsiella pneumoniae and Enterobacter spp. isolates, and remarkably the high-risk clone Escherichia coli ST361, carrying bla NDM−5, was identified. This study demonstrates that wastewater harbours carbapenem-resistant and carbapenemase-producing bacteria, posing a public health threat that requires epidemiological surveillance.