PLoS ONE (Jan 2013)

Antibiotic resistance of bacteria isolated from the internal organs of edible snow crabs.

  • Misoon Kim,
  • Tae-Hyung Kwon,
  • Su-Mi Jung,
  • Seung-Hak Cho,
  • Seon Yeong Jin,
  • Nyun-Ho Park,
  • Choong-Gon Kim,
  • Jong-Shik Kim

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0070887
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 8
p. e70887

Abstract

Read online

Antibiotic resistance and microbiota within edible snow crabs are important for the Chionoecetes (snow crab) fishing industry. We investigated these parameters using culture methods and antibiotic susceptibility tests with six internal organs from three species of Chionoecetes. Each sample revealed many unexpected microbial species within Chionoecetes internal organs. On the basis of 16S rRNA sequence analysis of 381 isolates, the most abundant genera identified in Chionoecetes opilio were Acinetobacter spp. (24%), Bacillus spp. (4%), Pseudomonas spp. (34%), Stenotrophomonas spp. (28%), and Agreia spp. (11%). In Chionoecetes sp. crabs, Acinetobacter spp. (23%), Bacillus spp. (12%), and Psychrobacter spp. (20%) were most prevalent, while Agreia spp. (11%), Bacillus spp. (31%), Microbacterium spp. (10%), Rhodococcus spp. (12%), and Agrococcus spp. (6%) were most abundant in C. japonicus. Our antibiotic resistance test found resistance to all nine antibiotics tested in 19, 14, and two of the isolates from C. opilio, Chionoecetes sp., and, C. japonicus respectively. Our results are the first to show that microbes with antibiotic resistance are widely distributed throughout the internal organs of natural snow crabs.