Department of Veterinary and Biomedical Sciences, College of Veterinary Medicine, University of Minnesota, St. Paul, Minnesota, USA
Department of Veterinary Population Medicine, College of Veterinary Medicine, University of Minnesota, St. Paul, Minnesota, USA.
Appl Environ Microbiol. 2020 Oct 1;86(20). doi: 10.1128/AEM.00571-20.
Antimicrobial resistance (AMR) is a well-documented phenomenon in bacteria from many natural ecosystems, including wild animals. However, the specific determinants and spatial distribution of resistant bacteria and antimicrobial resistance genes (ARGs) in the environment remain incompletely understood. In particular, information regarding the importance of anthropogenic sources of AMR relative to that of other biological and ecological influences is lacking. We conducted a cross-sectional study of AMR in great horned owls () and barred owls () admitted to a rehabilitation center in the midwestern United States. A combination of selective culture enrichment and shotgun metagenomic sequencing was used to identify ARGs from Overall, the prevalence of AMR was comparable to that in past studies of resistant in raptors, with acquired ARGs being identified in 23% of samples. Multimodel regression analyses identified seasonality and owl age to be important predictors of the likelihood of the presence of ARGs, with birds sampled during warmer months being more likely to harbor ARGs than those sampled during cooler months and with birds in their hatch year being more likely to harbor β-lactam ARGs than adults. Beyond host-specific determinants, ARG-positive owls were also more likely to be recovered from areas of high agricultural land cover. Spatial clustering analyses identified a significant high-risk cluster of tetracycline resistance gene-positive owls in the southern sampling range, but this could not be explained by any predictor variables. Taken together, these results highlight the complex distribution of AMR in natural environments and suggest that both biological and anthropogenic factors play important roles in determining the emergence and persistence of AMR in wildlife. Antimicrobial resistance (AMR) is a multifaceted problem that poses a worldwide threat to human and animal health. Recent reports suggest that wildlife may play an important role in the emergence, dissemination, and persistence of AMR. As such, there have been calls for better integration of wildlife into current research on AMR, including the use of wild animals as biosentinels of AMR contamination in the environment. A One Health approach can be used to gain a better understanding of all AMR sources and pathways, particularly those at the human-animal-environment interface. Our study focuses on this interface in order to assess the effect of human-impacted landscapes on AMR in a wild animal. This work highlights the value of wildlife rehabilitation centers for environmental AMR surveillance and demonstrates how metagenomic sequencing within a spatial epidemiology framework can be used to address questions surrounding AMR complexity in natural ecosystems.
抗生素耐药性(AMR)是在包括野生动物在内的许多自然生态系统中的细菌中得到充分记录的现象。然而,环境中耐药细菌和抗生素耐药基因(ARGs)的具体决定因素和空间分布仍不完全清楚。特别是,关于人为来源的 AMR 相对于其他生物和生态影响的重要性的信息是缺乏的。我们对美国中西部一家康复中心收治的大角猫头鹰()和条纹猫头鹰()中的 AMR 进行了横断面研究。采用选择性培养富集和 shotgun 宏基因组测序相结合的方法,从 中鉴定出 ARGs。总体而言,AMR 的流行率与过去对猛禽中耐药的研究相似,在 23%的样本中发现了获得性 ARGs。多模型回归分析确定了季节性和猫头鹰年龄是 ARGs 存在可能性的重要预测因素,与在较凉爽月份采样的鸟类相比,在较温暖月份采样的鸟类更有可能携带 ARGs,而在其孵化年的鸟类比成年鸟类更有可能携带β-内酰胺类 ARGs。除了宿主特异性决定因素外,ARG 阳性猫头鹰也更有可能从高农业土地覆盖面积的地区中恢复。空间聚类分析确定了南部采样范围内一个四环素耐药基因阳性猫头鹰的显著高风险聚类,但这不能用任何预测变量来解释。总的来说,这些结果突出了自然环境中 AMR 的复杂分布,并表明生物和人为因素都在决定野生动物中 AMR 的出现和持续存在方面发挥着重要作用。抗生素耐药性(AMR)是一个多方面的问题,对人类和动物健康构成了全球性威胁。最近的报告表明,野生动物可能在 AMR 的出现、传播和持续存在中发挥重要作用。因此,有人呼吁更好地将野生动物纳入关于 AMR 的当前研究中,包括将野生动物用作环境中 AMR 污染的生物哨兵。一种大健康方法可用于更好地了解所有 AMR 来源和途径,特别是在人类-动物-环境界面上。我们的研究侧重于这个界面,以评估受人类影响的景观对野生动物中 AMR 的影响。这项工作强调了野生动物康复中心在环境 AMR 监测方面的价值,并展示了如何在空间流行病学框架内使用宏基因组测序来解决自然生态系统中 AMR 复杂性相关问题。