Formation and transmission of the bacterial aerosols of Staphylococcus aureus (including MRSA) carrying antibiotic-resistant genes in a chicken farming environment
Abstract
There is a rather limited understanding concerning the antibiotic-resistance of the airborne S. aureus and the transmission of the antibiotic-resistant genes it carries. Therefore, we isolated 149 S. aureus strains from the... [ view full abstract ]
There is a rather limited understanding concerning the antibiotic-resistance of the airborne S. aureus and the transmission of the antibiotic-resistant genes it carries. Therefore, we isolated 149 S. aureus strains from the samples collected from the feces, the indoor air and the outdoor air of 6 chicken farms, and performed the research on them with 15 types of antibiotics and the REP-PCR trace identification. The 100% homologous strains were selected to conduct the research on the carrying and transmission status of the antibiotic-resistant genes. The results revealed that 5.37% strains (8/149) were resistant to methicillins (MRSA), and 94% strains (140/149) were resistant to compound sulfamethoxazole, etc. In addition, these strains displayed a resistance to multiple antibiotics (4, 5 or 6 types) and there were also 3 strains resistant to 9 antibiotics. It should be noted that the antibiotic-resistance of some strains isolated from the feces, the indoor and outdoor air was basically the same, and the strains with the same REP-PCR trace identification result carried the same type of antibiotic- resistant genes. The results showed that airborne transmission not only causes the spread of epidemic diseases but also exerts threats to the public health of a community.
Authors
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Tongjie Chai
(Shandong Agricultural University)
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Dunjiang Liu
(Shandong Agricultural University)
Topic Area
Choose your Organised Session from the list below: Environmental antibiotic resistant bac
Session
OS-6D » Microbiology (15:30 - Tuesday, 16th August, Mc Munn Theatre)