Aklilu Lemma Institute of Pathobiology, Armauer Hansen Research Institute, Addis Ababa University, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.
PLoS One. 2021 Jul 15;16(7):e0254390. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0254390. eCollection 2021.
Globally, fermented foods (FFs), which may be traditional or industrially-produced, are major sources of nutrition. In the traditional practice, the fermentation process is driven by communities of virtually uncharacterized microflora indigenous to the food substrate. Some of these flora can have virulent or antibiotic resistance properties, posing risk to consumers. Others, such as Enterococcus faecalis and Enterococcus faecium, may also be found in such foods. Enterococci that harbor antibiotic resistance or virulence factors can cycle among animals, food, humans and the environment, thereby transferring these harmful properties at the gene level to harmless commensals in the food matrix, animals and humans. In this work, several microbial isolates obtained from different FF sources were analyzed for their identity and virulence and/or antibiotic resistance properties. For identification aiming at enterococci, isolates that were Gram-positive and catalase- and oxidase-negative were subjected to multiple tests including for growth in broth containing 6.5% NaCl, growth and hydrolytic activity on medium containing bile-esculin, hemolytic activity on blood agar, and growth at 45°C and survival after incubation at 60°C for 30 min. Furthermore, the isolates were tested for susceptibility/resistance to a select group of antibiotics. Finally, the isolates were molecularly-characterized with respect to species identity and presence of virulence-encoding genes by amplification of target genes. Most sources contained enterococci, in addition to most of them also containing Gram-negative flora. Most of these also harbored virulence factors. Several isolates were also antibiotic-resistant. These results strongly suggest attention should be given to better control presence of such potentially pathogenic species.
在全球范围内,发酵食品(FF),无论是传统的还是工业化生产的,都是主要的营养来源。在传统实践中,发酵过程是由与食品基质中本土的、实际上无法描述的微生物群落共同驱动的。其中一些菌群可能具有毒性或抗生素耐药性,对消费者构成风险。另一些,如粪肠球菌和屎肠球菌,也可能存在于这些食品中。携带抗生素耐药性或毒性因子的肠球菌可以在动物、食物、人类和环境中循环,从而在基因水平上将这些有害特性转移到食物基质、动物和人类中的无害共生菌。在这项工作中,从不同的 FF 来源中获得了几个微生物分离物,并对它们的身份、毒性和/或抗生素耐药性进行了分析。为了鉴定肠球菌,革兰氏阳性、过氧化氢酶和氧化酶阴性的分离物进行了多项测试,包括在含有 6.5%NaCl 的肉汤中生长、在含有胆汁-胆酸的培养基中生长和水解活性、在血琼脂上的溶血活性以及在 45°C 下生长和在 60°C 孵育 30 分钟后的存活能力。此外,还测试了分离物对一组选定抗生素的敏感性/耐药性。最后,通过扩增目标基因,对分离物进行了分子特征分析,以确定其物种身份和是否存在毒性编码基因。大多数来源都含有肠球菌,而且大多数还含有革兰氏阴性菌群。其中大多数还含有毒性因子。一些分离物也具有抗生素耐药性。这些结果强烈表明,应注意更好地控制这些潜在致病性物种的存在。