Introduction: The epidemiology of Staphylococcus aureus (SA) infections has gained interest in the last years for their importance in veterinary medicine, the emergence of some clonal animal lineages, and their increasingly evidenced zoonotic potential. The discovery of emergent mecC MRSA in farmed rabbits together with the sporadic reports of MRSA in companion rabbits, including livestockassociated clonal complex 398 MRSA and the Panton-Valentine Leucocidin-positive isolates have raised concern about the SA population in rabbits. Phenotypic and genotypic investigations were carried out on SA strains isolated from skin and lesion swabs of different rabbit categories and farm workers in order to evaluate the prevalence, the zoonotic infection risk, the predominant clonal lineages and the antibiotic resistance profiles. Materials and Methods: In June 2015, 2200 swabs were collected from 400 rabbits belonging to different categories (young rabbits, adults, reproducers), randomly selected from a large farm in the Lazio region. Ear, nasal, axillary, inguinal, perineum areas, and additional skin lesions were tested for the presence of SA. A random selected number of strains (n = 98) isolated from nasal swabs and skin lesions were characterized in order to assess the presence of nuc and mecA, bbp, selm, flank genes, to assign the spa-type and evaluate the antibiotic resistance by Kirby-Bauer and E-test methods (EUCAST 2017). The statistical analysis was performed by Software STATA version 13.0. Results: SA was detected with a frequency of 592 isolates (17%, n = 3376). All areas were infected, recording a significant difference between skin areas and lesions (p < 0.05), while relevant numbers were detected both in the ear (38%) and the nasal cavity (41%, p = 0.925). A significant difference was recorded in relation to the age ranges (p < 0.05), except for young (5%) and reproducers (4%; p = 0.785). All strains resulted MSSA but showed some multi-resistance profiles, ranging from 3 to 7 antibiotic classes: in particular tetracyclines (96%), macrolides (94%), diterpenes (84%), fluoroquinolones (64%), aminoglycosides B-C grades (48%, 5%), and glycopepetides (teicoplanin: 73%; hVISA: 4%; VISA: 5%). All the strains were negative for the presence of virulence genesand therefore were classified as low virulence strains. Five different spa-types were identified, belonging to two different clonal complexes (CC97, CC15). The most frequently recovered spa-type has been t2802 (55%), also detected in human samples. Conclusions: In this study a high frequency of multiresistant SA strains was observed in rabbits, although none could be classified as MRSA. Clonal lineages were not correlated to the sampling site, while an association was recorded with the antibiotic-resistance profiles.

Gen Bank Staphylococcus aureus Rabbit-Man. IT001HN 254 bp DNA linear BCT 24-JAN-2019. Bank It2187313 IT001HN MK463826

Attili, Annarita;Rossi, Giacomo;Cuteri, Vincenzo;Galosi, Livio;
2019-01-01

Abstract

Introduction: The epidemiology of Staphylococcus aureus (SA) infections has gained interest in the last years for their importance in veterinary medicine, the emergence of some clonal animal lineages, and their increasingly evidenced zoonotic potential. The discovery of emergent mecC MRSA in farmed rabbits together with the sporadic reports of MRSA in companion rabbits, including livestockassociated clonal complex 398 MRSA and the Panton-Valentine Leucocidin-positive isolates have raised concern about the SA population in rabbits. Phenotypic and genotypic investigations were carried out on SA strains isolated from skin and lesion swabs of different rabbit categories and farm workers in order to evaluate the prevalence, the zoonotic infection risk, the predominant clonal lineages and the antibiotic resistance profiles. Materials and Methods: In June 2015, 2200 swabs were collected from 400 rabbits belonging to different categories (young rabbits, adults, reproducers), randomly selected from a large farm in the Lazio region. Ear, nasal, axillary, inguinal, perineum areas, and additional skin lesions were tested for the presence of SA. A random selected number of strains (n = 98) isolated from nasal swabs and skin lesions were characterized in order to assess the presence of nuc and mecA, bbp, selm, flank genes, to assign the spa-type and evaluate the antibiotic resistance by Kirby-Bauer and E-test methods (EUCAST 2017). The statistical analysis was performed by Software STATA version 13.0. Results: SA was detected with a frequency of 592 isolates (17%, n = 3376). All areas were infected, recording a significant difference between skin areas and lesions (p < 0.05), while relevant numbers were detected both in the ear (38%) and the nasal cavity (41%, p = 0.925). A significant difference was recorded in relation to the age ranges (p < 0.05), except for young (5%) and reproducers (4%; p = 0.785). All strains resulted MSSA but showed some multi-resistance profiles, ranging from 3 to 7 antibiotic classes: in particular tetracyclines (96%), macrolides (94%), diterpenes (84%), fluoroquinolones (64%), aminoglycosides B-C grades (48%, 5%), and glycopepetides (teicoplanin: 73%; hVISA: 4%; VISA: 5%). All the strains were negative for the presence of virulence genesand therefore were classified as low virulence strains. Five different spa-types were identified, belonging to two different clonal complexes (CC97, CC15). The most frequently recovered spa-type has been t2802 (55%), also detected in human samples. Conclusions: In this study a high frequency of multiresistant SA strains was observed in rabbits, although none could be classified as MRSA. Clonal lineages were not correlated to the sampling site, while an association was recorded with the antibiotic-resistance profiles.
2019
295
File in questo prodotto:
File Dimensione Formato  
SA Gen Bank Staphylococcus aureus rabbit-man Submission2187313.txt

accesso aperto

Tipologia: Altro materiale allegato
Licenza: DRM non definito
Dimensione 13.58 kB
Formato Text
13.58 kB Text Visualizza/Apri
Depositico in Banca Dati S. aureus IT001HN-1-1.pdf

accesso aperto

Tipologia: Altro materiale allegato
Licenza: DRM non definito
Dimensione 35.4 kB
Formato Adobe PDF
35.4 kB Adobe PDF Visualizza/Apri

I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.

Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11581/424429
Citazioni
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.pmc??? ND
  • Scopus ND
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.isi??? ND
social impact