Salmonella Minnesota poultry origin has virulence factors and potential risk to human

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Abstract

The aim of this study was to evaluate virulence characteristics, antimicrobial resistance profile and the pattern of genetic similarity of 71 strains of Salmonella Minnesota isolated in the production chain of broilers between 2009 and 2010, into two units of a company (A and B). Isolates were serotyped and submitted to antimicrobial susceptibility by disk diffusion test. Using PCR, the presence of genes invA, lpfA, agfA and sefA and the genes conferring resistance to beta-lactam (blaTEM, blaSHV and blaCTX-M) were evaluated. The phylogenetic relationship was determined by the RAPD-PCR method. The highest percentages of resistance were to tetracycline and sulfonamide. Eight antimicrobial resistance profiles were recognized among strains isolated in industry A, and 11 resistance profiles in industry B. Of all strains of both industries, 100% were positive for the invA gene, 98.6% to agfA gene, 49.3% for lpfA gene, and no strain showed the sefA gene. Three strains were positive for the gene blaTEM (4.2%), 11 (15.5%) for the blaCTX-M gene. Phylogenetic evaluation showed the presence of seven clusters with similarity greater than 80% and three distinct profiles. Based on the dendrogram we observed the spread with similar profiles in both companies.

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Melo, R. T., Resende, A. R., Mendonça, E. P., Nalevaiko, P. C., Monteiro, G. P., Buiatte, A. B. G., & Rossi, D. A. (2020). Salmonella Minnesota poultry origin has virulence factors and potential risk to human. Arquivo Brasileiro de Medicina Veterinaria e Zootecnia, 72(4), 1353–1362. https://doi.org/10.1590/1678-4162-10884

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