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  3. Molecular epidemiology and genetic linkage of macrolide and aminoglycoside resistance in Staphylococcus intermedius of canine origin
 

Molecular epidemiology and genetic linkage of macrolide and aminoglycoside resistance in Staphylococcus intermedius of canine origin

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Publisher DOI
10.1016/S0378-1135(00)00347-3
PubMed ID
11230937
Description
A collection of 77 Staphylococcus intermedius isolates from dogs and cats in Switzerland was examined for resistance to erythromycin. Resistance profiles for 14 additional antibiotics were compared between erythromycin-resistant and susceptible isolates. A resistance prevalence of 27% for erythromycin was observed in the population under study. Complete correlation between resistance to erythromycin, and to spiramycin, streptomycin, and neomycin was observed. The erythromycin-resistant isolates all had a reduced susceptibility to clindamycin when compared to the erythromycin-susceptible isolates. Both constitutive and inducible resistance phenotypes were observed for clindamycin. Ribotyping showed that macrolide-aminoglycoside resistance was randomly distributed among unrelated strains. This suggests that this particular resistance profile is not related to a single bacterial clone but to the horizontal transfer of resistance gene clusters in S. intermedius populations. The erythromycin-resistant isolates were all carrying erm(B), but not erm(A), erm(C), or msr(A). The erm(B) gene was physically linked to Tn5405-like elements known as resistance determinants for streptomycin, streptothricin, neomycin and kanamycin. Analysis of the region flanking erm(B) showed the presence of two different groups of erm(B)-Tn5405-like elements in the S. intermedius population examined and of elements found in Gram-positive species other than staphylococci. This strongly suggests that erm(B) or the whole erm(B)-Tn5405-like elements in S. intermedius originate from other bacterial species, possibly from enterococci.
Date of Publication
2001-03-20
Publication Type
Article
Subject(s)
500 Science > 570 Life sciences; biology
600 Technology > 630 Agriculture
Language(s)
en
Contributor(s)
Boerlin, P.
Burnens, A. P.
Frey, Joachim
Institut für Veterinärbakteriologie (IVB)
Kuhnert, Peterorcid-logo
Institut für Veterinärbakteriologie (IVB)
Nicolet, J.
Additional Credits
Institut für Veterinärbakteriologie (IVB)
Series
Veterinary microbiology
Publisher
Elsevier
ISSN
0378-1135
Access(Rights)
metadata.only
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