2022
DOI: 10.1101/2022.03.07.483304
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Canine saliva is a source of interspecies antimicrobial resistance gene transfer

Abstract: While the One Health issues of intensive animal farming are commonly discussed, keeping companion animals is less associated with the interspecies headway of antimicrobial resistance. With the constant advance of veterinary standards, antibiotics are regularly applied in companion animal medicine. Due to the close coexistence of dogs and humans, dog bites and other casual encounters with dog saliva (e.g. licking the owner) are common. According to our metagenome studies based on 47 new generation sequencing ca… Show more

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Cited by 6 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…Household pets live in close contact with humans and pose a substantial risk for transmission of illnesses and drug-resistant pathogens to susceptible owners, pet shop employees, veterinarians, as well as other animals ( Rees et al, 2021 ). Novel resistance determinants continue to emerge in zoonotic pathogens and commensal bacteria isolated from household pets, mostly dogs and cats ( Jackson et al, 2009 ; Leonard et al, 2011 ; Cummings et al, 2015 ; KuKanich and Lubbers, 2015 ; Zhang et al, 2016 ; Bourély et al, 2019 ; Li et al, 2021 ; Hata et al, 2022 ; Tóth et al, 2022 ). Dogs are increasingly recognized as a potential reservoir and a relevant transmission pathway of commensal and pathogenic bacteria or their resistance genes ( Harada et al, 2012 ; Damborg et al, 2016 ; Francois Watkins et al, 2021 ).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Household pets live in close contact with humans and pose a substantial risk for transmission of illnesses and drug-resistant pathogens to susceptible owners, pet shop employees, veterinarians, as well as other animals ( Rees et al, 2021 ). Novel resistance determinants continue to emerge in zoonotic pathogens and commensal bacteria isolated from household pets, mostly dogs and cats ( Jackson et al, 2009 ; Leonard et al, 2011 ; Cummings et al, 2015 ; KuKanich and Lubbers, 2015 ; Zhang et al, 2016 ; Bourély et al, 2019 ; Li et al, 2021 ; Hata et al, 2022 ; Tóth et al, 2022 ). Dogs are increasingly recognized as a potential reservoir and a relevant transmission pathway of commensal and pathogenic bacteria or their resistance genes ( Harada et al, 2012 ; Damborg et al, 2016 ; Francois Watkins et al, 2021 ).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%