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The faecal microbiome of the Australian silver gull contains phylogenetically diverse ExPEC, aEPEC and Escherichia coli carrying the transmissible locus of stress tolerance

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Author
Wyrsch, Ethan R.
Hoye, Bethany J.
Sanderson-Smith, Martina
Gorman, Jody
Maute, Kimberly
Cummins, Max L.
Jarocki, Veronica M.
Marenda, Marc S.
Dolejská, MonikaORCiD Profile - 0000-0001-7877-483X
Djordjevic, Steven P.

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Publication date
2024
Published in
Science of the Total Environment
Volume / Issue
919 (April)
ISBN / ISSN
ISSN: 0048-9697
ISBN / ISSN
eISSN: 1879-1026
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  • Faculty of Medicine in Pilsen

This publication has a published version with DOI 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2024.170815

Abstract
Wildlife are implicated in the dissemination of antimicrobial resistance, but their roles as hosts for Escherichia coli that pose a threat to human and animal health is limited. Gulls (family Laridae) in particular, are known to carry diverse lineages of multiple-antibiotic resistant E. coli, including extra-intestinal pathogenic E. coli (ExPEC). Whole genome sequencing of 431 E. coli isolates from 69 healthy Australian silver gulls (Chroicocephalus novaehollandiae) sampled during the 2019 breeding season, and without antibiotic selection, was undertaken to assess carriage in an urban wildlife population. Phylogenetic analysis and genotyping resolved 123 sequence types (STs) representing most phylogroups, and identified diverse ExPEC, including an expansive phylogroup B2 cluster comprising 103 isolates (24 %; 31 STs). Analysis of the mobilome identified: i) widespread carriage of the Yersinia High Pathogenicity Island (HPI), a key ExPEC virulence determinant; ii) broad distribution of two novel phage elements, each carrying sitABCD and iii) carriage of the transmissible locus of stress tolerance (tLST), an element linked to sanitation resistance. Of the 169 HPI carrying isolates, 49 (48 %) represented diverse B2 isolates hosting FII-64 ColV-like plasmids that lacked iutABC and sitABC operons typical of ColV plasmids, but carried the serine protease autotransporter gene, sha. Diverse E. coli also carried archetypal ColV plasmids (52 isolates; 12 %). Clusters of closely related E. coli (<50 SNVs) from ST58, ST457 and ST746, sourced from healthy gulls, humans, and companion animals, were frequently identified. In summary, anthropogenically impacted gulls host an expansive E. coli population, including: i) putative ExPEC that carry ColV virulence gene cargo (101 isolates; 23.4 %) and HPI (169 isolates; 39 %); ii) atypical enteropathogenic E. coli (EPEC) (17 isolates; 3.9 %), and iii) E. coli that carry the tLST (20 isolates; 4.6 %). Gulls play an important role in the evolution and transmission of E. coli that impact human health.
Keywords
AMR, Bacteria, Epidemiology, Escherichia coli, Genome sequencing, Virulence
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14178/2777
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WOS:001187120300001
SCOPUS:2-s2.0-85185003923
PUBMED:38336047
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