Antimicrobial resistance genes aph(3′)-III, erm(B), sul2 and tet(W) abundance in animal faeces, meat, production environments and human faeces in Europe
Journal of Antimicrobial Chemotherapy
Oglądaj/ Open
Data
2022Autor
Yang, Dongsheng
Heederik, Dick J. J.
Scherpenisse, Peter
Van Gompel, Liese
Luiken, Roosmarijn E. C.
Wadepohl, Katharina
Skarżyńska, Magdalena
Van Heijnsbergen, Eri
Wouters, Inge M.
Greve, Gerdit D.
Jongerius-Gortemaker, Betty G. M.
Tersteeg-Zijderveld, Monique
Portengen, Lützen
Juraschek, Katharina
Fischer, Jennie
Zając, Magdalena
Wasyl, Dariusz
Metadane
Pokaż pełny rekordStreszczenie
Real-time quantitative PCR (qPCR) is an affordable method to quantify antimicrobial resistance gene (ARG) targets, allowing comparisons of ARG abundance along animal production chains.
Objectives
We present a comparison of ARG abundance across various animal species, production environments and humans in Europe. AMR variation sources were quantified. The correlation of ARG abundance between qPCR data and previously published metagenomic data was assessed.
Methods
A cross-sectional study was conducted in nine European countries, comprising 9572 samples. qPCR was used to quantify abundance of ARGs [aph(3′)-III, erm(B), sul2, tet(W)] and 16S rRNA. Variance component analysis was conducted to explore AMR variation sources. Spearman’s rank correlation of ARG abundance values was evaluated between pooled qPCR data and earlier published pooled metagenomic data.
Results
ARG abundance varied strongly among animal species, environments and humans. This variation was dominated by between-farm variation (pigs) or within-farm variation (broilers, veal calves and turkeys). A decrease in ARG abundance along pig and broiler production chains (‘farm to fork’) was observed. ARG abundance was higher in farmers than in slaughterhouse workers, and lowest in control subjects. ARG abundance showed a high correlation (Spearman’s ρ > 0.7) between qPCR data and metagenomic data of pooled samples.
Conclusions qPCR analysis is a valuable tool to assess ARG abundance in a large collection of livestock-associated samples. The between-country and between-farm variation of ARG abundance could partially be explained by antimicrobial use and farm biosecurity levels. ARG abundance in human faeces was related to livestock antimicrobial resistance exposure.
Zbiory
- Publikacje [572]