Antibiotics (Feb 2024)

Prevalence and Genetic Characterization of Methicillin-Resistant <i>Staphylococcus aureus</i> Isolated from Pigs in Japan

  • Michiko Kawanishi,
  • Mari Matsuda,
  • Hitoshi Abo,
  • Manao Ozawa,
  • Yuta Hosoi,
  • Yukari Hiraoka,
  • Saki Harada,
  • Mio Kumakawa,
  • Hideto Sekiguchi

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/antibiotics13020155
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 2
p. 155

Abstract

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We investigated the prevalence of livestock-associated methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (LA-MRSA) in pig slaughterhouses from 2018 to 2022 in Japan and the isolates were examined for antimicrobial susceptibility and genetic characteristics by whole-genome analysis. Although the positive LA-MRSA rates on farms (29.6%) and samples (9.9%) in 2022 in Japan remained lower than those observed in European countries exhibiting extremely high rates of confirmed human LA-MRSA infections, these rates showed a gradually increasing trend over five years. The ST398/t034 strain was predominant, followed by ST5/t002, and differences were identified between ST398 and ST5 in terms of antimicrobial susceptibility and the resistance genes carried. Notably, LA-MRSA possessed resistance genes toward many antimicrobial classes, with 91.4% of the ST398 strains harboring zinc resistance genes. These findings indicate that the co-selection pressure associated with multidrug and zinc resistance may have contributed markedly to LA-MRSA persistence. SNP analysis revealed that ST398 and ST5 of swine origin were classified into a different cluster of MRSA from humans, showing the same ST in Japan and lacking the immune evasion genes (scn, sak, or chp). Although swine-origin LA-MRSA is currently unlikely to spread to humans and become a problem in current clinical practice, preventing its dissemination requires using antimicrobials prudently, limiting zinc utilization to the minimum required nutrient, and practicing fundamental hygiene measures.

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