Abstract

Campylobacter jejuni (CJ) is a zoonotic microbe and a major causative organism of diarrheal infection in humans that often has its functional characteristics inactivated in stressed conditions. The current study assessed the correlation between recovered CJ and water quality parameters and the drug sensitivity patterns of the pathogen to frontline antibiotics in human and veterinary medicine. Water samples (n = 244) from rivers/estuarines were collected from April–September 2016, and physicochemical conditions were recorded on-site. CJ was isolated from the samples using standard microbiological methods and subjected to sensitivity testing to 10 antibiotics. Mean CJ counts were between 1 and 5 logs (CFU/mL). Ninety-five isolates confirmed as CJ by PCR showed varying rates of resistance. Sensitivity testing showed resistance to tetracycline (100%), azithromycin (92%), clindamycin (84.2%), clarithromycin and doxycycline (80%), ciprofloxacin (77.8%), vancomycin (70.5%), erythromycin (70%), metronidazole (36.8%) and nalidixic acid (30.5%). Virulence encoding genes were detected in the majority 80/95, 84.2%) of the confirmed isolates from cdtB; 60/95 (63.2%) from cstII; 49/95 (51.6%) from cadF; 45/95 (47.4%) from clpP; 30/95 (31.6%) from htrB, and 0/95 (0%) from csrA. A multiple resistance cmeABC active efflux pump system was present in 69/95 (72.6) isolates. The presence of CJ was positively correlated with temperature (r = 0.17), pH (r = 0.02), dissolved oxygen (r = 0.31), and turbidity (r = 0.23) but negatively correlated with salinity (r = −0.39) and conductivity (r = −0.28). The detection of multidrug resistant CJ strains from estuarine water and the differential gene expressions they possess indicates a potential hazard to humans. Moreover, the negative correlation between the presence of the pathogen and physicochemical parameters such as salinity indicates possible complementary expression of stress tolerance response mechanisms by wild-type CJ strains.

Highlights

  • Campylobacter spp. are of the epsilonproteobacteria class of microorganism [1]

  • The results showed that the estuarine isolated from the Swartkops in the Eastern Cape Province

  • The results showed that the estuarine water could potentially harbour multiple resistant Campylobacter jejuni (CJ) strains of public health concern among estuarine users

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Summary

Introduction

Campylobacter spp. are of the epsilonproteobacteria class of microorganism [1]. They are slow growing, Gram-negative, spiral shaped, motile organisms, characterized by their microaerobic nature [2]. They have been reported to be detected in greater quantities in diarrhea infections in humans than any other enteric pathogen and they require less than 100 cells to infect a host [3]. Campylobacters that invade and colonize the gastrointestinal (GI) tract in humans [4]. Public Health 2018, 15, 0925; doi:10.3390/ijerph15050925 www.mdpi.com/journal/ijerph

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