Journal Articles

Pathogenic and commensal Escherichia coli from irrigation water show potential in transmission of extended spectrum and AmpC β‐lactamases determinants to isolates from lettuce

There are few studies on the presence of extended‐spectrum β‐lactamases and AmpC β‐lactamases (ESBL/AmpC) in bacteria that contaminate vegetables. The role of the production environment in ESBL/AmpC gene transmission is poorly understood. The occurrence of ESBL/AmpC in Escherichia coli (n = 46) from lettuce and irrigation water and the role of irrigation water in the transmission of resistant E. coli were studied. The presence of ESBL/AmpC, genetic similarity and phylogeny were typed using genotypic and phenotypic techniques. The frequency of β‐lactamase gene transfer was studied in vitro. ESBLs/AmpC were detected in 35 isolates (76%). Fourteen isolates (30%) produced both ESBLs/AmpC. Prevalence was highest in E. coli from lettuce (90%). Twenty‐two isolates (48%) were multi‐resistant with between two and five ESBL/AmpC genes. The major ESBL determinant was the CTX‐M type (34 isolates). DHA (33% of isolates) were the dominant AmpC β lactamases. There was a high conjugation efficiency among the isolates, ranging from 3.5 × 10−2 to 1 × 10−2 ± 1.4 × 10−1 transconjugants per recipient. Water isolates showed a significantly higher conjugation frequency than those from lettuce. A high degree of genetic relatedness between E. coli from irrigation water and lettuce indicated possible common ancestry and pathway of transmission.

Link: http://bit.ly/2FH5lZQ

DOI: http://bit.ly/2FH5lZQ

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