Antibiotics (Oct 2022)

Occurrence and Characterization of NDM-1-Producing <i>Shewanella</i> spp. and <i>Acinetobacter portensis</i> Co-Harboring <i>tet</i>(X3) in a Chinese Dairy Farm

  • Ruichao Li,
  • Lifei Zhang,
  • Xiaoyu Lu,
  • Kai Peng,
  • Yuan Liu,
  • Xia Xiao,
  • Hongqin Song,
  • Zhiqiang Wang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/antibiotics11101422
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 10
p. 1422

Abstract

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Bacteria with carbapenem or tigecycline resistance have been spreading widely among humans, animals and the environment globally, being great threats to public health. However, bacteria co-carrying drug resistance genes of carbapenem and tigecycline in Shewanella and Acinetobacter species remain to be investigated. Here, we detected nine blaNDM-1-carrying Shewanella spp. isolates as well as three A. portensis isolates co-harboring tet(X3) and blaNDM-1 from seventy-two samples collected from a dairy farm in China. To explore their genomic characteristic and transmission mechanism, we utilized various methods, including PCR, antimicrobial susceptibility testing, conjugation experiment, whole-genome sequencing, circular intermediate identification and bioinformatics analysis. Clonal dissemination was found among three A. portensis, of which tet(X3) and blaNDM-1 were located on a novel non-conjugative plasmid pJNE5-X3_NDM-1 (333,311 bp), and the circular intermediate ΔISCR2-tet(X3)-blaNDM-1 was identified. Moreover, there was another copy of tet(X3) on the chromosome of A. portensis. It was verified that blaNDM-1 could be transferred to Escherichia coli C600 from Shewanella spp. by conjugation, and self-transmissible IncA/C2 plasmids mediated the transmission of blaNDM-1 in Shewanella spp. strains. Stringent surveillance was warranted to curb the transmission of such vital resistance genes.

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