Polyphasic characterization of antibiotic resistant and virulent Enterococci isolated from animal feed and stored-product insects

Date

2009-05-07T20:08:21Z

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Kansas State University

Abstract

Feed samples and live stored-product insects from feed mills and swine farms were collected and cultured for Enterococcus spp. The mean concentration of enterococci in insect and feed were 2.7 ± 0.5 × 101 cfu/insect and 6.3 ± 0.7 × 103 cfu/g respectively. A total of 362 isolates of enterococci collected from 89 feed samples and 228 stored-product insects were identified to the species level using PCR. These isolates were represented by Enterococcus casseliflavus (53.0%), E. gallinarum (20.4%), E. faecium (16.2%), E. hirae (5.2%), and E. faecalis (5.0%). Enterococci were phenotypically resistant to tetracycline (48.0%), erythromycin (14.3%), streptomycin (16.8%), kanamycin (12.1%), ciprofloxacin (11.0%), ampicillin (3.3%), and chloramphenicol (1.1%). All isolates were susceptible to vancomycin and gentamicin. Tetracycline resistance was encoded by tetM (50.0%), tetO (15.1%), tetK (0.5%), tetS (0.2%) and other unknown tetracycline determinants. Enterococci carried virulence genes including gelatinase (gelE; 21.5%), an enterococcus surface protein (esp; 1.9%), and cytolysin (cylA; 2.2%). An aggregation substance (asa1) gene was detected in 61.0% of E. faecalis isolates. Fifty perncet of E. faecalis isolates were phenotipically tested positive for aggregation substances. Enterococci with cylA genes were hemolytic (52.0%) and with gelE genes were gelatinolytic (18.5%). The ermB gene, encoding erythromycin resistance was detected in 8.8% of the total isolates. The Tn916/1545 family of conjugative transposons was detected in 10.7% of the isolates. Laboratory experiments showed that adults of the red flour beetle, Tribolium castaneum (Herbst), fed on poultry and cattle feeds inoculated with E. faecalis OG1RF:pCF10, were able to successfully acquire enterococci and contaminate sterile poultry and cattle feeds. To assess the potential of horizontal gene transfer, conjugation assays were carried out with E. faecalis using a donor (wild strains) and recipient (E. faecalis OG1SSP) in ratio of 1:10. Only one isolate (1 out of 18 E. faecalis) could transfer tetM to a recipient using broth mating. However, filter mating assay, followed by PCR confirmation revealed that 89.0% (16 out of 18 E. faecalis) of isolates could transfer tetM to E. faecalis. Transfer ratios of transconjugant per recipients ranged from 2.6 × 10-4 to 1 × 10-9. In summary, feed (52.0%) and stored-product insects (41.6%) collected from feed mills and swine farms carried antibiotic-resistant and potentially virulent enterococci. Our study showed that T. castaneum, a pest commonly associated with feed, served as a potential vector for enterococci in the feed environment. Conjugation assays followed by PCR confirmed presence of the tetM gene on a mobile genetic element(s) such as Tn916 and may be horizontally transferred to other Enterococcus species and to other bacteria of clinical significance.

Description

Keywords

Enterococci, Antibiotic resistance, virulence, animal feed, stored-product insects

Graduation Month

May

Degree

Doctor of Philosophy

Department

Department of Grain Science and Industry

Major Professor

Subramanyam Bhadriraju; Ludek Zurek

Date

2009

Type

Dissertation

Citation