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F Plasmids Are the Major Carriers of Antibiotic Resistance Genes in Human-Associated Commensal Escherichia coli
mSphere (2020)
  • Craig M. Stephens
  • Tyler Arismendi, Santa Clara University
  • Megan Wright, Santa Clara University
  • Austin Hartman, Santa Clara University
  • Andres Gonzalez, Santa Clara University
  • Matthew Gill, Santa Clara University
  • Mark Pandori, University of Nevada, Reno
  • David Hess, Santa Clara University
Abstract
The evolution and propagation of antibiotic resistance by bacterial pathogens are significant threats to global public health. Contemporary DNA se- quencing tools were applied here to gain insight into carriage of antibiotic resistance genes in Escherichia coli, a ubiquitous commensal bacterium in the gut micro- biome in humans and many animals, and a common pathogen. Draft genome sequences generated for a collection of 101 E. coli strains isolated from healthy undergraduate students showed that horizontally acquired antibiotic resistance genes accounted for most resistance phenotypes, the primary exception being resistance to quinolones due to chromosomal mutations. A subset of 29 diverse isolates carrying acquired resistance genes and 21 control isolates lacking such genes were further subjected to long-read DNA sequencing to enable complete or nearly complete genome assembly. Acquired resistance genes primarily resided on F plasmids (101/ 153 [67%]), with smaller numbers on chromosomes (30/153 [20%]), IncI complex plasmids (15/153 [10%]), and small mobilizable plasmids (5/153 [3%]). Nearly all resistance genes were found in the context of known transposable elements. Very few structurally conserved plasmids with antibiotic resistance genes were identified, with the exception of an 􏰀90-kb F plasmid in sequence type 1193 (ST1193) isolates that appears to serve as a platform for resistance genes and may have virulence-related functions as well. Carriage of antibiotic resistance genes on transposable elements and mobile plasmids in commensal E. coli renders the resistome highly dynamic.
Keywords
  • Antibiotic resistance,
  • Genomics,
  • Microbiology,
  • Escherichia coli,
  • plasmids
Disciplines
Publication Date
Summer July 31, 2020
Publisher Statement
Rising antibiotic resistance in human-associated bacterial pathogens is a serious threat to our ability to treat many infectious diseases. It is critical to understand how acquired resistance genes move in and through bacteria associated with humans, particularly for species such as Escherichia coli that are very common in the human gut but can also be dangerous pathogens. This work combined two distinct DNA sequencing approaches to allow us to explore the genomes of E. coli from college students to show that the antibiotic resistance genes these bacteria have acquired are usually carried on a specific type of plasmid that is naturally transferrable to other E. coli, and likely to other related bacteria.
Citation Information
Craig M. Stephens, Tyler Arismendi, Megan Wright, Austin Hartman, et al.. "F Plasmids Are the Major Carriers of Antibiotic Resistance Genes in Human-Associated Commensal Escherichia coli" mSphere (2020)
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/craig_stephens/23/
Creative Commons license
Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons CC_BY International License.