Journal of Global Antimicrobial Resistance (Jun 2020)

Dental plaque microbiota of pet owners and their dogs as a shared source and reservoir of antimicrobial resistance genes

  • Rosa Martha Pérez-Serrano,
  • Rubén Abraham Domínguez-Pérez,
  • José Luis Ayala-Herrera,
  • Alejandra Elizabeth Luna-Jaramillo,
  • Guadalupe Zaldivar-Lelo de Larrea,
  • Juan Carlos Solís-Sainz,
  • Pablo García-Solís,
  • Juan Pablo Loyola-Rodríguez

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 21
pp. 285 – 290

Abstract

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Objective: This investigation aimed to detect coincidences in the antimicrobial resistance genes (ARG) profiles between members of a group living in a household and to compare them between other groups in order to establish if an exchange of ARG occurs and if dental plaque microbiota can be considered as a source and reservoir of ARG that can be shared between humans and pets. Methods: One hundred sixty dental plaque samples were obtained from four groups: Shelter dogs group (n = 20), adult pet owners and dogs group (AD group, n = 40), adult pet owners, children and dogs group (ACD group, n = 60), and adult non-pet owners and children group (AC group, n = 40). DNA was obtained, and specific primers with polymerase chain reaction for ARG detection were used. Results: The AD group exhibited the most coincidences in their ARG profiles, 14 (70%) of the 20 profiles coincided in 100% followed by the ACD group with 9 (45%) coincidences. While the AC group was the less coincident group, only 7 (35%) of the 20 profiles coincided. tetM was the most prevalent with 53.1%, followed by tetQ with 52.5% and cfxA with 51.2%, while the less prevalent were tetW with 31.8%, blaTEM-1 with 27.5%, and ermC with 18.7%. Conclusion: Dental plaque microbiota can be considered as a source and reservoir of ARG that can be shared between humans and dogs living in a household. The dogs seem to play an important role in the transference of ARG, and the children appear to be the most affected by carrying the most significant number of ARG.

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