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Aeromonas Isolates from Fish and Patients in Tainan City, Taiwan: Genotypic and Phenotypic Characteristics.


ABSTRACT: The present study aimed to isolate Aeromonas from fish sold in the markets as well as in sushi and seafood shops and compare their virulence factors and antimicrobial characteristics with those of clinical isolates. Among the 128 fish isolates and 47 clinical isolates, Aeromonas caviae, A. dhakensis, and A. veronii were the principal species. A. dhakensis isolates carried at least 5 virulence genes, more than other Aeromonas species. The predominant genotype of virulence genes was hlyA lip alt col ela in both A. dhakensis and A. hydrophila isolates, alt col ela in A. caviae isolates, and act in A. veronii isolates. A. dhakensis, A. hydrophila, and A. veronii isolates more often exhibited hemolytic and proteolytic activity and showed greater virulence than A. caviae isolates in Caenorhabditis elegans and the C2C12 cell line. However, the link between the genotypes and phenotypes of the studied virulence genes in Aeromonas species was not evident. Among the four major clinical Aeromonas species, nearly all (99.0%) A. dhakensis, A. hydrophila, and A. veronii isolates harbored bla CphA, which encodes a carbapenemase, but only a minority (6.7%, 7/104) were nonsusceptible to carbapenem. Regarding AmpC ?-lactamase genes, bla AQU-1 was exclusively found in A. dhakensis isolates, and bla MOX3 was found only in A. caviae isolates, but only 7.6% (n = 6) of the 79 Aeromonas isolates carrying bla AQU-1 or bla MOX3 exhibited a cefotaxime resistance phenotype. In conclusion, fish Aeromonas isolates carry a variety of combinations of virulence and ?-lactamase resistance genes and exhibit virulence phenotypes and antimicrobial resistance profiles similar to those of clinical isolates.IMPORTANCE Aeromonas species can cause severe infections in immunocompromised individuals upon exposure to virulent pathogens in the environment, but the characteristics of environmental Aeromonas species remain unclear. Our study showed that several pathogenic Aeromonas species possessing virulence traits and antimicrobial resistance similar to those of Aeromonas isolates causing clinical diseases were present in fish intended for human consumption in Tainan City, Taiwan.

SUBMITTER: Wu CJ 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC6803315 | biostudies-literature | 2019 Nov

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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<i>Aeromonas</i> Isolates from Fish and Patients in Tainan City, Taiwan: Genotypic and Phenotypic Characteristics.

Wu Chi-Jung CJ   Ko Wen-Chien WC   Lee Nan-Yao NY   Su Shu-Li SL   Li Chia-Wen CW   Li Ming-Chi MC   Chen Yi-Wei YW   Su Yu-Cheng YC   Shu Cing-Ying CY   Lin Yu-Tzu YT   Chen Po-Lin PL  

Applied and environmental microbiology 20191016 21


The present study aimed to isolate <i>Aeromonas</i> from fish sold in the markets as well as in sushi and seafood shops and compare their virulence factors and antimicrobial characteristics with those of clinical isolates. Among the 128 fish isolates and 47 clinical isolates, <i>Aeromonas caviae</i>, <i>A. dhakensis</i>, and <i>A. veronii</i> were the principal species. <i>A. dhakensis</i> isolates carried at least 5 virulence genes, more than other <i>Aeromonas</i> species. The predominant geno  ...[more]

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