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Article
Effects of subtherapeutic concentrations of antimicrobials on gene acquisition events in Yersinia, Proteus, Shigella, and Salmonella recipient organisms in isolated ligated intestinal loops of swine
American Journal of Veterinary Research
  • Matt T. Brewer, Iowa State University
  • Nalee Xiong, Iowa State University
  • Kristi L. Anderson, Iowa State University
  • Steve A. Carlson, Iowa State University
Document Type
Article
Publication Version
Published Version
Publication Date
8-1-2013
DOI
10.2460/ajvr.74.8.1078
Abstract

Objective—To assess antimicrobial resistance and transfer of virulence genes facilitated by subtherapeutic concentrations of antimicrobials in swine intestines.

Animals—20 anesthetized pigs experimentally inoculated with donor and recipient bacteria.

Procedures—4 recipient pathogenic bacteria (Salmonella enterica serotype Typhimurium, Yersinia enterocolitica, Shigella flexneri, or Proteus mirabilis) were incubated with donor bacteria in the presence of subinhibitory concentrations of 1 of 16 antimicrobials in isolated ligated intestinal loops in swine. Donor Escherichia coli contained transferrable antimicrobial resistance or virulence genes. After coincubations, intestinal contents were removed and assessed for pathogens that acquired new antimicrobial resistance or virulence genes following exposure to the subtherapeutic concentrations of antimicrobials.

Results—3 antimicrobials (apramycin, lincomycin, and neomycin) enhanced transfer of an antimicrobial resistance plasmid from commensal E coli organisms to Yersinia and Proteus organisms, whereas 7 antimicrobials (florfenicol, hygromycin, penicillin G, roxarsone, sulfamethazine, tetracycline, and tylosin) exacerbated transfer of an integron (Salmonella genomic island 1) from Salmonella organisms to Yersinia organisms. Sulfamethazine induced the transfer of Salmonella pathogenicity island 1 from pathogenic to nonpathogenic Salmonella organisms. Six antimicrobials (bacitracin, carbadox, erythromycin, sulfathiazole, tiamulin, and virginiamycin) did not mediate any transfer events. Sulfamethazine was the only antimicrobial implicated in 2 types of transfer events.

Conclusions and Clinical Relevance—10 of 16 antimicrobials at subinhibitory or subtherapeutic concentrations augmented specific antimicrobial resistance or transfer of virulence genes into pathogenic bacteria in isolated intestinal loops in swine. Use of subtherapeutic antimicrobials in animal feed may be associated with unwanted collateral effects.

Comments

This article is from American Journal of Veterinary Research 74 (2013): 1078–1083, doi:10.2460/ajvr.74.8.1078. Posted with permission.

Copyright Owner
American Veterinary Medical Association
Language
en
File Format
application/pdf
Citation Information
Matt T. Brewer, Nalee Xiong, Kristi L. Anderson and Steve A. Carlson. "Effects of subtherapeutic concentrations of antimicrobials on gene acquisition events in Yersinia, Proteus, Shigella, and Salmonella recipient organisms in isolated ligated intestinal loops of swine" American Journal of Veterinary Research Vol. 74 Iss. 8 (2013) p. 1078 - 1083
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/matt-brewer/11/