The effect of oral amoxicillin treatment on fecal microbiota of seven healthy adult dogs was determined with a focus on the prevalence of bacterial antibiotic resistance and changes in predominant bacterial populations. After 4-7 days of exposure to amoxicillin, fecal Escherichia coli expressed resistance to multiple antibiotics when compared with the pre-exposure situation. Two weeks postexposure, the susceptibility pattern had returned to pre-exposure levels in most dogs. A shift in bacterial populations was confirmed by molecular fingerprinting of fecal bacterial populations using denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis (PCR-DGGE) of the 16S V3 rRNA gene region. Much of the variation in DGGE profiles could be attributed to dog-specific factors. However, permutation tests indicated that amoxicillin exposure significantly affected the DGGE profiles after controlling for the dog effect (P=0.02), and pre-exposure samples were clearly separated from postexposure samples. Sequence analysis of DGGE bands and real-time PCR quantification indicated that amoxicillin exposure caused a shift in the intestinal ecological balance toward a Gram-negative microbiota including resistant species in the family Enterobacteriaceae. © 2009 Federation of European Microbiological Societies.
CITATION STYLE
Grønvold, A. M. R., L’Abée-Lund, T. M., Sørum, H., Skancke, E., Yannarell, A. C., & MacKie, R. I. (2010). Changes in fecal microbiota of healthy dogs administered amoxicillin. FEMS Microbiology Ecology, 71(2), 313–326. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1574-6941.2009.00808.x
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