Abstract

Chickens and guinea fowl are commonly reared in Gambian homes as affordable sources of protein. Using standard microbiological techniques, we obtained 68 caecal isolates of Escherichia coli from 10 chickens and 9 guinea fowl in rural Gambia. After Illumina whole-genome sequencing, 28 sequence types were detected in the isolates (4 of them novel), of which ST155 was the most common (22/68, 32 %). These strains span four of the eight main phylogroups of E. coli, with phylogroups B1 and A being most prevalent. Nearly a third of the isolates harboured at least one antimicrobial resistance gene, while most of the ST155 isolates (14/22, 64 %) encoded resistance to ≥3 classes of clinically relevant antibiotics, as well as putative virulence factors, suggesting pathogenic potential in humans. Furthermore, hierarchical clustering revealed that several Gambian poultry strains were closely related to isolates from humans. Although the ST155 lineage is common in poultry from Africa and South America, the Gambian ST155 isolates belong to a unique cgMLST cluster comprising closely related (38–39 alleles differences) isolates from poultry and livestock from sub-Saharan Africa – suggesting that strains can be exchanged between poultry and livestock in this setting. Continued surveillance of E. coli and other potential pathogens in rural backyard poultry from sub-Saharan Africa is warranted.

Highlights

  • The domestic chicken (Gallus gallus domesticus) is the most numerous bird on the planet, with an estimated population of over 22.7 billion – 10 times more than any other bird [1]

  • Hierarchical clustering resolved the study strains into 22 core-­genome MLST (cgMLST) complexes, indicating a high level of genomic diversity (File S2)

  • We have described the genomic diversity of E. coli from backyard chickens and guinea fowl reared in households in rural Gambia, West Africa

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Summary

Introduction

The domestic chicken (Gallus gallus domesticus) is the most numerous bird on the planet, with an estimated population of over 22.7 billion – 10 times more than any other bird [1] Since their domestication from the red jungle fowl in Asia between 6000 and 8000 years ago [2, 3], chickens have been found almost everywhere humans live. The helmeted guinea fowl (Numida meleagris) originated in West Africa, domesticated forms of this bird are found in many parts of the tropics.

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