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VIM‐1 carbapenemase‐producing Escherichia coli in gulls from southern France
Authors:Marion Vittecoq  Chrislène Laurens  Lionel Brazier  Patrick Durand  Eric Elguero  Audrey Arnal  Frédéric Thomas  Salim Aberkane  Nicolas Renaud  Franck Prugnolle  Jérôme Solassol  Hélène Jean‐Pierre  François Renaud
Institution:1. Centre de recherche de la Tour du Valat, Arles, France;2. MIVEGEC (Laboratoire Maladies Infectieuses et Vecteurs, Ecologie, Génétique, Evolution et Contr?le), UMR CNRS 5290/IRD 224, Université Montpellier, Montpellier, France;3. Département de Bactériologie‐Virologie, Centre Hospitalier Régional Universitaire (CHRU) de Montpellier, Montpellier, France;4. Université Montpellier, Montpellier, France;5. INSERM U 1058, Infection by HIV and by agents with mucocutaneous tropism: from pathogenesis to prevention, Montpellier, France;6. Department of Biopathology, CHRU, Montpellier, France;7. Department of Clinical Oncoproteomic, Montpellier Cancer Institute, Montpellier, France;8. UMR 5119 (UM, CNRS, IRD, IFREMER), Equipe Pathogènes et Environnements, U.F.R. 9. Pharmacie, Montpellier, France
Abstract:Acquired carbapenemases currently pose one of the most worrying public health threats related to antimicrobial resistance. A NDM‐1‐producing Salmonella Corvallis was reported in 2013 in a wild raptor. Further research was needed to understand the role of wild birds in the transmission of bacteria resistant to carbapenems. Our aim was to investigate the presence of carbapenem‐resistant Escherichia coli in gulls from southern France. In 2012, we collected 158 cloacal swabs samples from two gull species: yellow‐legged gulls (Larus michahellis) that live in close contact with humans and slender‐billed gulls (Chroicocephalus genei) that feed at sea. We molecularly compared the carbapenem‐resistant bacteria we isolated through culture on selective media with the carbapenem‐susceptible strains sampled from both gull species and from stool samples of humans hospitalized in the study area. The genes coding for carbapenemases were tested by multiplex PCR. We isolated 22 carbapenem‐resistant E. coli strains from yellow‐legged gulls while none were isolated from slender‐billed gulls. All carbapenem‐resistant isolates were positive for blaVIM‐1 gene. VIM‐1‐producing E. coli were closely related to carbapenem‐susceptible strains isolated from the two gull species but also to human strains. Our results are alarming enough to make it urgently necessary to determine the contamination source of the bacteria we identified. More generally, our work highlights the need to develop more bridges between studies focusing on wildlife and humans in order to improve our knowledge of resistant bacteria transmission routes.
Keywords:antimicrobial resistance  enterobacteria  humans  Larus  molecular characterization  phylogenetic analyses  wild birds
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