Abstract

To characterize IncI1 and IncF18:A−:B1 multidrug-resistance plasmids from an avian Escherichia coli isolate, antibiotic susceptibility testing, conjugation assays, transformation assays, S1-PFGE, and WGS analysis were performed. The 119,457-bp plasmid pEC014–1 with a multidrug-resistance region (MRR) containing four different segments interspersed with six IS26 elements, belonged to incompatibility group I1 and sequence type 71. The 154,516-bp plasmid pEC014–2 with two replicons, typed as FII-18 and FIB-1, carried 14 resistance determinants including blaTEM-1b, blaOXA-1, oqxAB, dfrA17, aac(6′)-Ib-cr, sul1, sul2, tet(A), floR, catB3, hph(aph(4)-Ia), aacC4(aac(3)-IV), aadA5, arr-3, and a merEDACPTR loci in MRR, and additionally encoded three virulence loci: iroNEDCB, sitABCD, and iucABCD-iutA. Plasmid stability assays showed that pEC014–1 and pEC014–2 were stable in recipient E. coli C600 for at least 15 days of passage. Competition assays were carried out to evaluate the fitness impact of pEC014–2 carriage in vitro, revealing a decrease in host fitness. Growth kinetics showed that the growth rate for pEC014–1 or/and pEC014–2 bearing cells was significantly slower than that of the E. coli C600 host strain in the exponential stage (p < 0.01), with only cells carrying pEC014–1 sustaining rapid growth after 6 h of exponential growth. Our findings highlight the mosaic structures of epidemic plasmid IncI1/ST71 and F18:A−:B1 lineages and contribute to a better understanding of the evolution and dissemination of these multidrug resistance and virulence plasmids.

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