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1.
Sci Rep ; 10(1): 911, 2020 01 22.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31969575

ABSTRACT

The practice of prophylactic administration of a macrolide antimicrobial with rifampin (MaR) to apparently healthy foals with pulmonary lesions identified by thoracic ultrasonography (i.e., subclinically pneumonic foals) is common in the United States. The practice has been associated epidemiologically with emergence of R. equi resistant to MaR. Here, we report direct evidence of multi-drug resistance among foals treated with MaR. In silico and in vitro analysis of the fecal microbiome and resistome of 38 subclinically pneumonic foals treated with either MaR (n = 19) or gallium maltolate (GaM; n = 19) and 19 untreated controls was performed. Treatment with MaR, but not GaM, significantly decreased fecal microbiota abundance and diversity, and expanded the abundance and diversity of antimicrobial resistance genes in feces. Soil plots experimentally infected with Rhodococcus equi (R. equi) and treated with MaR selected for MaR-resistant R. equi, whereas MaR-susceptible R. equi out-competed resistant isolates in GaM-treated or untreated plots. Our results indicate that MaR use promotes multi-drug resistance in R. equi and commensals that are shed into their environment where they can persist and potentially infect or colonize horses and other animals.


Subject(s)
Anti-Bacterial Agents/adverse effects , Anti-Bacterial Agents/pharmacology , Antibiotic Prophylaxis , Drug Resistance, Multiple/drug effects , Drug Resistance, Multiple/genetics , Horse Diseases/prevention & control , Macrolides/adverse effects , Macrolides/therapeutic use , Organometallic Compounds/adverse effects , Organometallic Compounds/therapeutic use , Pneumonia, Bacterial/prevention & control , Pneumonia, Bacterial/veterinary , Pyrones/adverse effects , Pyrones/therapeutic use , Rhodococcus equi/drug effects , Rifampin/adverse effects , Rifampin/therapeutic use , Animals , Anti-Bacterial Agents/therapeutic use , Feces/microbiology , Horses , Macrolides/pharmacology , Microbial Sensitivity Tests , Organometallic Compounds/pharmacology , Pneumonia, Bacterial/microbiology , Pyrones/pharmacology , Rhodococcus equi/genetics , Rifampin/pharmacology
2.
J Bacteriol ; 194(24): 6790-801, 2012 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23042997

ABSTRACT

Rhodococcus equi is a facultative intracellular, Gram-positive, soilborne actinomycete which can cause severe pyogranulomatous pneumonia with abscessation in young horses (foals) and in immunocompromised people, such as persons with AIDS. All strains of R. equi isolated from foals and approximately a third isolated from humans contain a large, ~81-kb plasmid which is essential for the intramacrophage growth of the organism and for virulence in foals and murine in vivo model systems. We found that the entire virulence plasmid could be transferred from plasmid-containing strains of R. equi (donor) to plasmid-free R. equi strains (recipient) at a high frequency and that plasmid transmission reestablished the capacity for intracellular growth in macrophages. Plasmid transfer required living cells and cell-to-cell contact and was unaffected by the presence of DNase, factors pointing to conjugation as the major means of genetic transfer. Deletion of a putative relaxase-encoding gene, traA, located in the proposed conjugative region of the plasmid, abolished plasmid transfer. Reversion of the traA mutation restored plasmid transmissibility. Finally, plasmid transmission to other Rhodococcus species and some additional related organisms was demonstrated. This is the first study showing a virulence plasmid transfer in R. equi, and it establishes a mechanism by which the virulence plasmid can move among bacteria in the soil.


Subject(s)
Conjugation, Genetic , Plasmids/genetics , Rhodococcus equi/genetics , Rhodococcus equi/pathogenicity , Actinomycetales Infections/microbiology , Actinomycetales Infections/pathology , Actinomycetales Infections/veterinary , Animals , Bacterial Proteins/genetics , DNA, Bacterial/genetics , Deoxyribonucleases/metabolism , Gene Transfer, Horizontal , Horse Diseases/microbiology , Horses , Macrophages/microbiology , Sequence Analysis, DNA
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