Abstract
Urban water environments, including canals, harbours and estuaries are susceptible to contamination with antimicrobials and drug-resistant bacteria through domestic and industrial wastewater discharges and storm water overflows. There is potential for wildlife using these waters to acquire and transmit drug-resistant bacteria and antimicrobial resistance genes (ARGs) of clinical importance. This study aimed to assess clinically important drug-resistant bacteria in urban waterfowl, particularly mute swans. Faecal samples were collected from 17 mute swans in the Greater Dublin Area, Ireland during July, August, October, and November of 2022. Samples were swabbed directly onto agars to select for carbapenem resistant, Extended-spectrum Beta-lactamase (ESBL)-producing, ciprofloxacin resistant and colistin resistant bacteria. Isolates identified by MALDI-TOF as Enterobacterales were tested for susceptibility to a panel of 16 antimicrobials and real-time PCR was employed to detect cefotaximase and carbapenemase genes (CRGs). Drug-resistant isolates were characterised by Whole Genome Sequencing (WGS), including long read sequencing for carbapenemase and mobile colistin resistance (mcr) gene-producing Enterobacterales isolates. Eleven of seventeen (65%) swan samples were positive for the resistant organism(s) (n=35), comprising Escherichia coli (n=32; 82%) and other Enterobacterales (n=3). Twenty E. coli (63%) produced ESBL, with 16/20 (80%) identified as positive for blaCTX-M-group 1 enzymes, comprising CTX-M-15 (n=13), CTX-M-55 (n=2) and CTX-M-1 (n=1) and 4/20 (20%) positive for blaCTX-M-group 9 enzymes CTX-M-27 (n=2) and CTX-M-9 (n=2). Three E. coli isolates were phenotypically ertapenem resistant, one of which was an ST4450 isolate which carried plasmid encoded blaOXA-181 and blaCMY-141 with blaCTX-M-15 identified chromosomally. One colistin resistant E. coli bore the mcr-1 gene chromosomally. Bioinformatic analysis revealed high-risk pathogenic ESBL E. coli clones including ST38 (n=3), ST69 (n=3), and ST131 (n=2). The study indicates mute swans are a reservoir for drug-resistant Enterobacterales and ARGs of clinical importance and may be a useful sentinel species for antimicrobial resistance (AMR) surveillance in wildlife.
Published Version
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