The aim of this study was to characterize the prevalence of fecal carriage of extended-spectrum beta-lactamases and carbapenemase-producing Gram-negative bacteria among healthy humans in Tunisia. Fifty-one rectal swabs of healthy volunteers were plated on MacConkey agar plates supplemented with cefotaxime or imipenem. The occurrences of resistance genes, integrons, and phylogroup typing were investigated using PCR and sequencing. The genetic relatedness of isolates was determined by pulsed-field-gel-electrophoresis (PFGE) and multilocus-sequence-typing (MLST). Whole-genome-sequencing (WGS) was performed for the carbapenem-resistant isolate. Sixteen ESBL-producing Escherichia coli isolates and one carbapenem-resistant Enterobacter bugandensis were detected out of the fifty-one fecal samples. The ESBL-producing E. coli strains contained genes encoding CTX-M-15 (n = 9), CTX-M-1 (n = 3), CTX-M-27 (n = 3), and CTX-M-55 (n = 1). Three CTX-M-1-producers were of lineages ST131, ST7366, and ST1158; two CTX-M-15-producers belonged to lineage ST925 and ST5100; one CTX-M-27-producer belonged to ST2887, and one CTX-M-15-producer belonged to ST744. Six isolates contained class 1 integrons with the following four gene cassette arrangements: dfrA5 (two isolates), dfrA12-orf-aadA2 (two isolates), dfrA17-aadA5 (one isolate), and aadA1 (one isolate). E. bugandensis belonged to ST1095, produced IMI-2 carbapenemase, and contained qnrE1 and fosA genes. A genome-sequence analysis of the E. bugandensis strain revealed new mutations in the blaACT and qnr genes. Our results reveal an alarming rate of ESBL-E. coli in healthy humans in Tunisia and the first description of IMI-2 in E. bugandensis.
Here, we report the osmoadaptation strategies adopted by the halotolerant species Halomonas titanicae BH1(T) inferred from genome sequence analysis. BH strain was isolated in 2010 from a rusticated sample collected in 1991 from the wreck of the Titanic, genome deposited in the database under the accession number (CP059082.1). It showed a high salt tolerance ranging from 0.5 to 25% NaCl (w/v) (optimal growth at 10% NaCl) with no growth in the absence of NaCl. The phylogenomic analysis showed that the BH1 strain is more closely related to the Halomonas sedementi QX-2, a strain isolated from deep-sea sediments. The RAST (Rapid Annotation using Subsystem Technology) annotation revealed divergent mechanisms involved in the primary and secondary response to osmotic stress citing protein implicated in potassium transport, periplasmic glucan synthesis, choline and betaine upake system, biosynthesis of glycine-betaine, ectoine, and proline. These findings provide an overview of the osmoadaptive mechanisms of H. titanicae BH1, and could offer helpful information to future biotechnological applications like osmolyte synthesis and related applications.
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