Abstract

BackgroundEpidemiological studies suggested that determinants for antibiotic resistance have originated in aquaculture. Recently, the integrated agriculture-aquaculture system has been implemented, where fish are raised in ponds that receive agriculture drainage water. The present study aims to investigate the occurrence of β-lactamase and carbapenemase-producing Enterobacteriaceae in the integrated agriculture-aquaculture and the consequent public health implication.MethodsSamples were collected from fish, fishpond water inlets, tap water, outlet water, and workers at sites of integrated agriculture-aquacultures. Samples were also taken from inhabitants of the aquaculture surrounding areas. All samples were cultured on MacConkey agar, the Enterobacteriaceae isolates were tested for susceptibility to cephalosporins and carbapenems, and screened for blaCTX-M-15, blaSHV, blaOXA-1, blaTEM, blaPER-1, blaKPC, blaOXA-48, and blaNDM. Strains having similar resistance phenotype and genotype were examined for the presence of Incompatible (Inc) plasmids.ResultsA major proportion of the Enterobacteriaceae isolates were resistant to cephalosporins and carbapenems. Among the 66 isolates from fish, 34 were resistant to both cephalosporin and carbapenem groups, 26 to carbapenems alone, and 4 to cephalosporins alone. Of the 15 isolates from fishpond water inlets, 8 showed resistance to both groups, 1 to carbapenems alone, and 5 to cephalosporins alone. Out of the 33 isolates from tap water, 17 were resistant to both groups, and 16 to cephalosporins alone. Similarly, of the 16 outlet water isolates, 10 were resistant to both groups, and 6 to cephalosporins alone. Furthermore, of the 30 examined workers, 15 carried Enterobacteriaceae resistant strains, 10 to both groups, and 5 to cephalosporins alone. Similar strains were isolated from the inhabitants of the aquaculture surrounding areas. Irrespective of source of samples, strains resistant to all examined antibiotics, carried predominantly the carbapenemase gene blaKPC either alone or with the β-lactamase genes (blaCTX-M-15, blaSHV, blaTEM, and blaPER-1). The isolates from fish, water, and workers harboured a wide-range of multi-drug-resistance Inc. plasmids, which were similar among all isolates.ConclusionThe present findings suggest transmission of the resistance genes among Enterobacteriaceae strains from different sources. This reiterates the need for control strategies that focus on humans, animals, water, and sewage systems to solve the antibiotic resistance problem.

Highlights

  • A link between aquaculture and the development of antibiotic resistance has been demonstrated by an increasing body of research [1, 2]

  • The occurrence of Enterobacteriaceae was high among the collected samples from fishpond water inlets (15/30; 50%), tap water (33/44; 75%), and outlet water (16/26; 62%) from the aquacultures

  • We investigated the occurrence of β-lactamase- and carbapenemase (CPE)- producing Enterobacteriaceae in fresh fish, fishpond water inlets, tap water, outlet water, and workers at four integrated agriculture-aquacultures

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Summary

Introduction

A link between aquaculture and the development of antibiotic resistance has been demonstrated by an increasing body of research [1, 2]. An integrated agriculture-aquaculture system has been implemented to save water resources [7]. In such system, fish are reared in ponds receiving water from crop farms through irrigation canals. The major concern with the use of antibiotics in aquaculture is that fish do not effectively metabolize antibiotics and pass them largely unused in faeces [8]. This encourages the development of antibiotic resistance in bacteria present in fish and the surrounding environment [1, 2, 9]. The present study aims to investigate the occurrence of βlactamase and carbapenemase-producing Enterobacteriaceae in the integrated agriculture-aquaculture and the consequent public health implication

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