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Food commensal microbes as a potentially important avenue in transmitting antibiotic resistance genes
Authors:Hua H Wang  Michele Manuzon  Mark Lehman  Kai Wan  Hongliang Luo  Thomas E Wittum  Ahmed Yousef  & Lauren O Bakaletz
Institution:Department of Food Science and Technology, The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH, USA. wang.707@osu.edu
Abstract:The rapid emergence of antibiotic-resistant (ART) pathogens is a major threat to public health. While the surfacing of ART food-borne pathogens is alarming, the magnitude of the antibiotic resistance (AR) gene pool in food-borne commensal microbes is yet to be revealed. Incidence of ART commensals in selected retail food products was examined in this study. The presence of 10(2)-10(7) CFU of ART bacteria per gram of foods in many samples, particularly in ready-to-eat, 'healthy' food items, indicates that the ART bacteria are abundant in the food chain. AR-encoding genes were detected in ART isolates, and Streptococcus thermophilus was found to be a major host for AR genes in cheese microbiota. Lactococcus lactis and Leuconostoc sp. isolates were also found carrying AR genes. The data indicate that food could be an important avenue for ART bacterial evolution and dissemination. AR-encoding plasmids from several food-borne commensals were transmitted to Streptococcus mutans via natural gene transformation under laboratory conditions, suggesting the possible transfer of AR genes from food commensals to human residential bacteria via horizontal gene transfer.
Keywords:foods  commensals  antibiotic resistance  horizontal gene transfer              Streptococcus thermophilus
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