Characterization of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus CC398 obtained from humans and animals on dairy farms

Andrea T. Feßler, Richard G M Olde Riekerink, Anja Rothkamp, Kristina Kadlec, Otlis C. Sampimon, Theo J G M Lam, Stefan Schwarz*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

In this study MRSA isolates from dairy farms were investigated for their genetic relationships and antimicrobial susceptibility. In total, 125 MRSA isolates from 26 dairy farms were studied, including isolates from milk samples (n= 46), dairy cattle (n= 24), calves (n= 6), dust samples from pig (n= 16) and veal calf sheds (n= 1), dogs (n= 2), a horse, a sheep and humans (n= 28). CC398-specific PCRs, spa typing, SCC. mec typing and ApaI macrorestriction analysis were conducted. Susceptibility testing was performed by broth microdilution. All 125 isolates belonged to CC398. Eight spa types (t011, t108, t034, t567, t1184, t1451, t2287 and t3934) were detected. SCC. mec elements of types IV (n= 48) and V (n= 67) were identified with 10 isolates being non-typeable. Six main macrorestriction patterns - with up to 23 sub-patterns - and twelve resistance patterns were identified. Sixty-eight isolates showed a multiresistance phenotype. Farm-by-farm analysis revealed different scenarios: in some farms, the MRSA CC398 isolates from dairy cattle, humans, pig sheds and/or sheep were indistinguishable suggesting an interspecies exchange of the same MRSA CC398 subtype. In other farms, several MRSA CC398 subtypes were detected in different host species/sources with occasionally even more than one MRSA CC398 subtype from the same host species/source. These latter results may suggest that either different MRSA subtypes associated with humans or animals have been imported into the respective farm or that one MRSA CC398 strain has undergone diversification, reflected by more or less expanded changes in PFGE patterns, spa type or resistance pattern, during colonization of different hosts on the same farm.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)77-84
Number of pages8
JournalVeterinary Microbiology
Volume160
Issue number1-2
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 9 Nov 2012

Keywords

  • Antimicrobial resistance
  • Livestock-associated MRSA
  • Molecular typing
  • Spa typing

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