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Int J Food Microbiol


Title:"Comparative analysis of genetic diversity and incidence of virulence factors and antibiotic resistance among enterococcal populations from raw fruit and vegetable foods, water and soil, and clinical samples"
Author(s):Abriouel H; Omar NB; Molinos AC; Lopez RL; Grande MJ; Martinez-Viedma P; Ortega E; Canamero MM; Galvez A;
Address:"University of Jaen, Area de Microbiologia, Facultad de Ciencias Experimentales, Jaen, Spain"
Journal Title:Int J Food Microbiol
Year:2008
Volume:20071204
Issue:1-Feb
Page Number:38 - 49
DOI: 10.1016/j.ijfoodmicro.2007.11.067
ISSN/ISBN:0168-1605 (Print) 0168-1605 (Linking)
Abstract:"A comparative study was carried out among enterococci isolated from fruits and vegetable foods, water and soil, and clinical samples. Results indicate strong differences in the numbers of enterococcal species found in different environments as well as their abundance. While Enterococcus faecalis was clearly the predominant species in clinical samples, Enterococcus faecium predominated in vegetables, and it slightly outnumbered E. faecalis in water samples. Other species (Enterococcus hirae, Enterococcus mundtii, Enterococcus durans, Enterococcus gallinarum and Enterococcus casseliflavus) were found more frequently in vegetables, water, and specially in soil. Isolates from vegetable foods showed a lower incidence of antibiotic resistance compared to clinical isolates for most antimicrobials tested, especially erythromycin, tetracycline, chloramphenicol, ciprofloxacin, levofloxacin, gentamicin and streptomycin for E. faecalis, and quinupristin/dalfopristin, ampicillin, penicillin, ciprofloxacin, levofloxacin, rifampicin, choramphenicol, gentamicin and nitrofurantoin for E. faecium. E. faecium isolates from vegetable foods and water showed an average lower number of antibiotic resistance traits (2.95 and 3.09 traits for vegetable and water isolates, respectively) compared to clinical samples (7.5 traits). Multi-resistant strains were also frequent among clinical E. faecalis isolates (5.46 traits on average). None of E. faecalis or E. faecium isolates from vegetable foods, water and soil showed beta-haemolytic activity, while 25.64% of clinical E. faecalis did. A 51.28% of E. faecalis clinical isolates tested positive for the cylA, cylB, cylM set of genes, while some or all of these genes were missing in the rest of isolates. In clinical E. faecalis and E. faecium isolates, the genetic determinants for the enterococcal surface protein gene (esp), the collagen adhesin gene (ace) and the sex pheromone gene ccf (as well as cob in E. faecalis) showed a clearly higher incidence compared to isolates from other sources. E. faecalis isolates from vegetable foods and water had much lower average numbers of virulence genetic determinants per strain (4.23 and 4.0, respectively) compared to clinical isolates (8.71). Similarly, among E. faecium the lowest average number of traits per strain occurred in vegetable food isolates (1.72) followed by water (3.9) and clinical isolates (4.73). Length heterogeneity (LH)-PCR typing with espF-aceF-ccfF and espF-ccfF primers revealed genomic groups that clearly differentiated clinical isolates from those of vegetable foods, water and soil (except for two clinical isolates). The large differences found in the incidence of antibiotic resistance and virulence factors and in the genetic fingerprints determined by LH-PCR suggest a clear separation of hospital-adapted populations of enterococci from those found in open environments"
Keywords:"Anti-Bacterial Agents/pharmacology Colony Count, Microbial Consumer Product Safety DNA, Bacterial/chemistry/genetics *Drug Resistance, Bacterial/genetics Drug Resistance, Multiple, Bacterial Enterococcus/classification/drug effects/*genetics/isolation & p;"
Notes:"MedlineAbriouel, Hikmate Omar, Nabil Ben Molinos, Antonio Cobo Lopez, Rosario Lucas Grande, Maria Jose Martinez-Viedma, Pilar Ortega, Elena Canamero, Magdalena Martinez Galvez, Antonio eng Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't Netherlands 2008/01/09 Int J Food Microbiol. 2008 Mar 31; 123(1-2):38-49. doi: 10.1016/j.ijfoodmicro.2007.11.067. Epub 2007 Dec 4"

 
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