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Virulence-determinants and antibiotic-resistance genes of MDR- *E. coli* isolated from secondary infections following FMD-outbreak in cattle

Veterinary Science

Virulence-determinants and antibiotic-resistance genes of MDR- *E. coli* isolated from secondary infections following FMD-outbreak in cattle

A. M. Algammal, H. F. Hetta, et al.

This groundbreaking study explores the prevalence and antibiotic resistance of *E. coli* in cattle post-foot-and-mouth disease outbreak in Egypt. The authors reveal alarming multidrug resistance patterns and significant virulence genes, presenting a critical public health concern. With 100% prevalence of the *phoA* gene and promising treatments identified, this research by Abdelazeem M. Algammal and colleagues sheds light on an urgent issue facing livestock health.

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Abstract
This study aimed to evaluate the prevalence, multidrug-resistance traits, PCR-detection of virulence, and antibiotic-resistance genes of E. coli isolated from secondary infections following FMD-outbreak in cattle. A total of 160 random samples were gathered from private dairy farms in Damietta Province, Egypt. The specimens were subjected to bacteriological examination, serotyping, congo-red binding assay, antibiogram-testing, and PCR-monitoring of virulence-determinant genes (tsh, phoA, hly, eaeA, sta, and lt) as well as the antibiotic-resistance genes (blaTEM, blaKPC, and blaCTX). The prevalence of E. coli was 30% (n = 48) distributed in 8 serogroups (40/48, 83.3%), while 8 isolates (8/48, 16.6%) were untypable. Besides, 83.3% of the examined isolates were positive for CR-binding. The tested strains harbored the virulence genes phoA, hly, tsh, eaeA, sta, and lt with a prevalence of 100% and 50%, 45.8%, 25%, 8.4%, and 6.2%, respectively. Furthermore, 50% of the recovered strains were multidrug-resistant (MDR) to penicillins, cephalosporins, and carbapenems, and are harboring the blaTEM, blaCTX, and blaKPC genes. Moreover, 25% of the examined strains are resistant to penicillins, and cephalosporins, and are harboring the blaTEM and blaCTX genes. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first report concerning the E. coli secondary bacterial infections following the FMD-outbreak. The emergence of MDR strains is considered a public health threat and indicates complicated treatment and bad prognosis of infections caused by such strains. Colistin sulfate and levofloxacin have a promising in vitro activity against MDR-E. coli.
Publisher
Scientific Reports
Published On
Nov 13, 2020
Authors
Abdelazeem M. Algammal, Helal F. Hetta, Gaber E. Batiha, Wael N. Hozzein, Waleed M. El Kazzaz, Hany R. Hashem, Ayat M. Tawfik, Reham M. El-Tarabili
Tags
E. coli
multidrug resistance
virulence genes
antibiotic resistance
cattle
foot-and-mouth disease
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