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Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, May 2007, p. 1872-1875, Vol. 51, No. 5
0066-4804/07/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/AAC.01514-06
Copyright © 2007, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Dissemination of an Extended-Spectrum-β-Lactamase blaTEM-52 Gene-Carrying IncI1 Plasmid in Various Salmonella enterica Serovars Isolated from Poultry and Humans in Belgium and France between 2001 and 2005
Axel Cloeckaert,1*
Karine Praud,1
Benoît Doublet,1
Alessia Bertini,2
Alessandra Carattoli,2
Patrick Butaye,3
Hein Imberechts,3
Sophie Bertrand,4
Jean-Marc Collard,4
Guillaume Arlet,5 and
François-Xavier Weill6
INRA, UR1282, Infectiologie Animale et Santé Publique, IASP, Nouzilly F-37380, France,1
Department of Infectious, Parasitic, Immune-mediated Diseases, Istituto Superiore di Sanità, Rome, Italy,2
Department of Bacteriology and Immunology, CODA-CERVA-VAR, Groeselenberg 99, 1180 Brussels, Belgium,3
National Reference Centre for Salmonella and Shigella, Bacteriology Division, Scientific Institute of Public Health, 14 Wytsman St., B-1050 Brussels, Belgium,4
Département de Bactériologie, UPRES EA2392, Faculté de Médecine Pierre et Marie Curie, 27 Rue de Chaligny, 75012 Paris, France,5
Centre National de Référence des Salmonella, Unité de Biodiversité des Bactéries Pathogènes Emergentes, 28 Rue du Docteur Roux, 75724 Paris Cedex 15, France6
Received 1 December 2006/
Returned for modification 7 February 2007/
Accepted 19 February 2007

ABSTRACT
We report here the dissemination of a conjugative IncI1 plasmid
carrying
blaTEM-52 on a Tn
3 transposon conferring resistance
to extended-spectrum cephalosporins in
Salmonella enterica serovar
Agona, Derby, Infantis, Paratyphi B dT
+, and Typhimurium isolates
from poultry and humans in Belgium and France from 2001 to 2005.
The most prevalent serovar spreading this resistance was serovar
Infantis.

TEXT
Food-producing animals are the primary reservoir of zoonotic
pathogens, and the rate of detection of extended-spectrum β-lactamase
(ESBL)-producing
Escherichia coli and
Salmonella strains has
increased in recent years. ESBLs are widely detected in various
human medical institutions, but they are not so frequently reported
in bacterial populations circulating in animals. In Belgium
and France the emergence of resistance to extended-spectrum
cephalosporins, such as ceftriaxone and ceftiofur, has been
recently reported in
Salmonella enterica serovar Virchow isolates
from poultry and humans (
1,
15). Resistance was due to the ESBL
genes
blaCTX-M-2 or
blaCTX-M-9 carried on large conjugative
plasmids.
Since 2001 a large number of strains have been isolated from poultry (more than 150 in Belgium) and a more limited number from humans (n = 15) in Belgium and France showing resistance to extended-spectrum cephalosporins by production of an ESBL not belonging to the CTX-M family and with various additional resistances to other antibiotic families. The serovars concerned were Agona, Derby, Infantis, Paratyphi B dT+, and Typhimurium. In particular, the emergence of extended-spectrum cephalosporin-resistant serovar Infantis with more than 80 strains isolated from poultry and 4 strains from humans caused some concern. The purpose of the present study was to identify the ESBL gene and its location in these strains.
Strains studied are shown in Table 1. Antibiotic susceptibility testing was done by the disk diffusion method, and the MICs of ceftriaxone and ceftiofur were determined as described previously (1, 14, 15). Resistance to extended-spectrum cephalosporins from all Salmonella strains was transferred to an E. coli recipient strain by conjugation as previously described (1, 14, 15), and all E. coli transconjugant strains showed the same antibiotic resistance profile (Table 1). Other resistances from multidrug-resistant strains were not transferred by conjugation. According to the MICs, the levels of resistance to ceftiofur and ceftriaxone were lower in the transconjugant strains than in the parental strains, but this was also observed in a previous study (14). PCR assays to detect ESBL genes (TEM, SHV, and CTX-M) were performed on parental and transconjugant strains using previously described primers (1, 14, 15), and nucleotide sequencing of the amplicons identified the blaTEM-52 resistance gene in all strains. Plasmids extracted from the transconjugants were further characterized by PstI restriction analysis showing that they were all identical and greater than 100 kb in size (Fig. 1). Southern blot hybridization experiment with a blaTEM-52 gene probe was performed as described previously (12). It revealed two PstI fragments of 2.9 and 2.75 kb. In fact, this PstI restriction profile corresponded exactly to that of blaTEM-52-carrying plasmids isolated in 2002 and 2003 from four isolates of S. enterica serovars Typhimurium, Enteritidis, and Panama from French patients with gastroenteritis (14). A study performed in 2001 and 2002 on Salmonella isolated from poultry, poultry products, and human patients in The Netherlands revealed that the TEM-52 variant was the most common ESBL detected in this bacterial collection (6). In particular, TEM-52-producing salmonellae of the serovars Blockley, Virchow, Typhimurium, and Paratyphi B were identified from poultry, and strains of the serovars Thompson, London, Enteritidis, and Blockley were identified from human patients (6). Several sporadic cases of E. coli TEM-52 producers were reported in animals: dogs in Portugal, rabbits in Spain, and beef meat in Denmark (2, 4, 8). These findings suggest a wide dissemination of this ESBLs in Europe in animals and humans. The presence of the blaTEM-52 gene in E. coli, as well as in different Salmonella serovars, strongly indicated that it is not due to the spread of a single clone but to the horizontal transmission of this resistance trait. To better identify the molecular mechanism of dissemination of this ESBL, the blaTEM-52-positive plasmids were typed by the PCR-based replicon typing as previously described (3), demonstrating that they all belong to the IncI1 incompatibility group. IncI1 plasmids were recently described in E. coli and Salmonella strains of different serovars isolated in the United Kingdom associated with relevant β-lactamases such as CMY-2, CMY-7, and CTX-M-15, suggesting a large prevalence of IncI1 plasmids in Europe (7).
To identify the mobile genetic element carrying the
blaTEM-52 gene, the plasmid DNA of
E. coli transconjugant 04-3486TC1 extracted
with a QIAfilter Midi kit (QIAGEN, Courtaboeuf, France) was
digested with ClaI and ligated into the ClaI-restricted phagemid
pBK-CMV (Stratagene). Recombinant plasmids were introduced into
E. coli DH10B by electroporation (Bio-Rad Gene Pulser II; Bio-Rad,
Marnes-La-Coquette, France) and selected on Mueller-Hinton (MH)
agar (Bio-Rad) containing kanamycin (30 µg/ml) and ceftazidime
(2 µg/ml). Recombinant plasmids that possessed a 4.7-kb
insert were selected. Nucleotide sequencing of the insert indicated
that the
blaTEM-52 gene was located on a Tn
3 transposon. To
complete the transposon sequence, nucleotide sequencing was
further performed by genome walking on the native plasmid. This
Tn
3 transposon structure is shown in Fig.
2. Its nucleotide
sequence is deposited in GenBank under accession number EF141186.
Very few sequences of complete Tn
3 elements from
Salmonella are currently available (
10). Complete plasmid-borne Tn
3 elements,
however, specifying non-ESBLs have recently been described in
serovar Typhimurium from a rabbit and in serovar Infantis from
poultry and shown to be linked to either the tetracycline resistance
gene
tet(A) or the quinolone resistance gene
qnrS (
9,
13).
Among the extended-spectrum cephalosporin-resistant
Salmonella strains studied, five isolates belonging to serovars Agona,
Paratyphi B dT
+, and Typhimurium, showed an additional multidrug
resistance profile with resistances to chloramphenicol, florfenicol,
streptomycin, spectinomycin, sulfonamide, tetracycline, and
trimethoprim (Table
1). This multidrug resistance profile is
characteristic of SGI1 antibiotic resistance gene clusters,
which were previously identified in these serovars (
11). Identification
of SGI1 and mapping of its antibiotic resistance gene cluster
performed as described previously (
5) showed that two of the
five isolates possessed SGI1 and the SGI1-A variant in serovar
Typhimurium strain 04-3486 and serovar Agona strain 777SA01,
respectively (Table
1). Serovar Agona strains with SGI1-A are
frequently isolated from poultry in Belgium (
5). The serovar
Typhimurium isolate carrying SGI1 was further shown to be of
phage type DT104, a dominant multidrug-resistant clone that
has spread all over the world (
11). To our knowledge, this is
the first time that multidrug-resistant strains carrying SGI1
together with a plasmid-borne ESBL gene have been reported,
and further surveillance of such strains is thus warranted.
Since most of the strains showing extended-spectrum cephalosporin resistance were of serovar Infantis, these were further investigated for clonality by XbaI and BlnI macrorestriction pulsed-field gel electrophoresis analysis. The Infantis isolates showing the same resistance profile and whatever their origin, poultry or human, showed identical XbaI and BlnI macrorestriction profiles, indicating that these were clonal (data not shown).
In conclusion, the present study showed the spread of an IncI1 plasmid carrying the blaTEM-52 gene among S. enterica serovars Agona, Derby, Infantis, Paratyphi B dT+, and Typhimurium, as well as the spread of a single Infantis clone carrying this plasmid mainly in poultry. It is thus likely that humans infected with these strains were contaminated by ingestion of undercooked poultry products. The further spread of such plasmids in multidrug-resistant strains carrying SGI1 is of concern.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
We thank C. Mouline and V. Collet for expert technical assistance.

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Unité Infectiologie Animale et Santé Publique Site 213, Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique, 37380 Nouzilly, France. Phone: 33(0)2 47 42 77 50. Fax: 33(0)2 47 42 77 74. E-mail:
cloeckae{at}tours.inra.fr 
Published ahead of print on 26 February 2007. 

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Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, May 2007, p. 1872-1875, Vol. 51, No. 5
0066-4804/07/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/AAC.01514-06
Copyright © 2007, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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