Department of Pediatrics, University of Miami Miller School of Medicine, Miami, FL 33136, USA.
Microb Ecol. 2013 May;65(4):1024-38. doi: 10.1007/s00248-013-0178-3. Epub 2013 Mar 19.
In May of 2011, a live mass stranding of 26 short-finned pilot whales (Globicephala macrorhynchus) occurred in the lower Florida Keys. Five surviving whales were transferred from the original stranding site to a nearby marine mammal rehabilitation facility where they were constantly attended to by a team of volunteers. Bacteria cultured during the routine clinical care of the whales and necropsy of a deceased whale included methicillin-sensitive and methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MSSA and MRSA). In order to investigate potential sources or reservoirs of MSSA and MRSA, samples were obtained from human volunteers, whales, seawater, and sand from multiple sites at the facility, nearby recreational beaches, and a canal. Samples were collected on 3 days. The second collection day was 2 weeks after the first, and the third collection day was 2 months after the last animal was removed from the facility. MRSA and MSSA were isolated on each day from the facility when animals and volunteers were present. MSSA was found at an adjacent beach on all three collection days. Isolates were characterized by utilizing a combination of quantitative real-time PCR to determine the presence of mecA and genes associated with virulence, staphylococcal protein A typing, staphylococcal cassette chromosome mec typing, multilocus sequence typing, and pulsed field gel electrophoresis (PFGE). Using these methods, clonally related MRSA were isolated from multiple environmental locations as well as from humans and animals. Non-identical but genetically similar MSSA and MRSA were also identified from distinct sources within this sample pool. PFGE indicated that the majority of MRSA isolates were clonally related to the prototype human strain USA300. These studies support the notion that S. aureus may be shed into an environment by humans or pilot whales and subsequently colonize or infect exposed new hosts.
2011 年 5 月,在佛罗里达州下群岛发生了一起短鳍领航鲸的大规模搁浅事件,共有 26 头短鳍领航鲸搁浅。其中 5 头幸存的鲸鱼从最初的搁浅地点被转移到附近的海洋哺乳动物康复中心,由一组志愿者团队对其进行持续护理。在对鲸鱼进行常规临床护理和对一头死亡鲸鱼进行尸检的过程中培养了细菌,包括耐甲氧西林敏感金黄色葡萄球菌(MSSA)和耐甲氧西林金黄色葡萄球菌(MRSA)。为了调查 MSSA 和 MRSA 的潜在来源或储层,从志愿者、鲸鱼、海水和来自设施多个地点的沙子、附近的娱乐海滩和运河采集了样本。在 3 天内采集了样本。第二次采集是在第一次采集后的 2 周,第三次采集是在最后一头鲸鱼从设施中被转移后的 2 个月。当动物和志愿者在场时,每天都从设施中分离出 MRSA 和 MSSA。在所有三天的采样中,在相邻的海滩上都发现了 MSSA。使用定量实时 PCR 来确定 mecA 和与毒力相关的基因的存在、葡萄球菌蛋白 A 分型、葡萄球菌盒式染色体 mec 分型、多位点序列分型和脉冲场凝胶电泳(PFGE)的组合来对分离株进行了特征描述。利用这些方法,从多个环境地点以及人和动物中分离出了克隆相关的 MRSA。在这个样本池中,还从不同的来源中鉴定出了非同源但遗传上相似的 MSSA 和 MRSA。PFGE 表明,大多数 MRSA 分离株与原型人株 USA300 具有克隆相关性。这些研究支持了这样一种观点,即金黄色葡萄球菌可能会被人类或短鳍领航鲸排放到环境中,随后定植或感染暴露的新宿主。