Abstract

ABSTRACTThe chicken gastrointestinal tract is richly populated by commensal bacteria that fulfill various beneficial roles for the host, including helping to resist colonization by pathogens. It can also facilitate the conjugative transfer of multidrug resistance (MDR) plasmids between commensal and pathogenic bacteria which is a significant public and animal health concern as it may affect our ability to treat bacterial infections. We used an in vitro chemostat system to approximate the chicken cecal microbiota, simulate colonization by an MDR Salmonella pathogen, and examine the dynamics of transfer of its MDR plasmid harboring several genes, including the extended-spectrum beta-lactamase blaCTX-M1. We also evaluated the impact of cefotaxime administration on plasmid transfer and microbial diversity. Bacterial community profiles obtained by culture-independent methods showed that Salmonella inoculation resulted in no significant changes to bacterial community alpha diversity and beta diversity, whereas administration of cefotaxime caused significant alterations to both measures of diversity, which largely recovered. MDR plasmid transfer from Salmonella to commensal Escherichia coli was demonstrated by PCR and whole-genome sequencing of isolates purified from agar plates containing cefotaxime. Transfer occurred to seven E. coli sequence types at high rates, even in the absence of cefotaxime, with resistant strains isolated within 3 days. Our chemostat system provides a good representation of bacterial interactions, including antibiotic resistance transfer in vivo. It can be used as an ethical and relatively inexpensive approach to model dissemination of antibiotic resistance within the gut of any animal or human and refine interventions that mitigate its spread before employing in vivo studies.

Highlights

  • The chicken gastrointestinal tract is richly populated by commensal bacteria that fulfill various beneficial roles for the host, including helping to resist colonization by pathogens

  • We show that transfer of a multidrug-resistant plasmid from the zoonotic pathogen Salmonella to commensal Escherichia coli occurs at a high rate, even in the absence of antibiotic administration

  • We report the development of an in vitro chemostat system that aims to approximate the chicken cecal microbiota and use it to demonstrate the effect of infection of the chicken with a multidrug-resistant (MDR) Salmonella and ensuing antibiotic administration

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Summary

Introduction

The chicken gastrointestinal tract is richly populated by commensal bacteria that fulfill various beneficial roles for the host, including helping to resist colonization by pathogens. Chemostats provide useful screening tools to examine the effects of interventions on the microbiota under controlled experimental conditions without the ethical restrictions associated with human and animal trials Such models have been used to investigate the impact of antibiotics on proliferation of Clostridium difficile in a human gut model [20], the transfer of AMR gene-harboring plasmids from avian E. coli to a limited number of human E. coli clones in a human gut model [17], the production of metabolites such as short-chain fatty acids in human, chicken, and pig microbiota [21, 22], and the impact of dietary elements on human microbiota [23, 24]

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