1977
DOI: 10.1128/aac.12.3.373
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Plasmids Carried by Antibiotic-Resistant Marine Bacteria

Abstract: Antibiotic-resistant bacteria were isolated from seawater samples collected in the Atlantic Ocean off the southeastern coast of the United States. Large numbers of antibiotic-resistant bacterial strains were found to be present in harbor and inshore waters; however, the percentage of resistant strains was higher for several seawater samples collected offshore than for those collected near shore. Bacteria resistant to tetracycline, chloramphenicol, and streptomycin were found in nearly all samples collected, in… Show more

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Cited by 48 publications
(36 citation statements)
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“…However, Tiainen and colleagues [33] found a remarkable difference between northern European and southern European strains. Plasmids were almost exclusively found in the northern European isolates, and since in the study by Larsen and Olsen [13] only Danish isolates were included, this may very well account for the reported difference in ,,t tr _ ) Rt C' £, _" _q (7 plasmid content. The present study included 02 strains from all over the world.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…However, Tiainen and colleagues [33] found a remarkable difference between northern European and southern European strains. Plasmids were almost exclusively found in the northern European isolates, and since in the study by Larsen and Olsen [13] only Danish isolates were included, this may very well account for the reported difference in ,,t tr _ ) Rt C' £, _" _q (7 plasmid content. The present study included 02 strains from all over the world.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As such, much effort has been put into its isolation, identification, characterization, and typing [1]. Although plasmids have been detected among several Vibrio species, including Vibrio vulnificus [2], Vibrio ordalii [3], Vibrio cholerae [4], Vibrio salmonicida [5], Vibriofischeri [6], and various other vibrios [7,8], Vibrio anguillarum is maybe the Vibrio species most extensively studied with respect to plasmids. This has been done for several reasons: from Japan, several authors have shown the involvement of large plasmids, MDa, in resistance to one or more antimicrobial drugs [9][10][11][12].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In earlier studies to determine plasmid incidence, reported frequencies varied from 27%, for more than 400 putative marine Vibrio spp. (Hada & Sizemore, 1981), to 43% of bioluminescent bacteria (Simon et aI., 1982) and 60% of nearshore and open ocean isolates (Sizemore & Colwell, 1977). In a similar study, Glassman & McNicol (1981) reported 46% of estuarine bacteria from Chesapeake Bay carried plasmids.…”
Section: Plasmid Incidence and Distribution In Marine Bacteriamentioning
confidence: 91%
“…Although numerous studies have reported on the incidence of plasmids in bacteria isolated from marine sediments, estuarine, and pelagic ecosystems (Sizemore & Colwell, 1977;Kobori et aI., 1984;Hermansson et aI., 1987;Wortman & Colwell, 1988;Belliveau et al, 1991;Aviles et aI., 1993;Dahlberg et aI., 1997), there remains a general lack of knowledge regarding the diversity (e.g. replicon types) and transfer capabilities of plasmids in indigenous marine bacterial assemblages.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, in response to changing environmental conditions or when attempting to colonize new niches, plasmids can sequester additional novel genes (Szpirer et al, 1999), thereby altering their RFLP pattern yet retaining the basic replicon. Numerous studies have documented bacterial plasmid incidence in microbial communities occurring in marine sediments and estuarine and pelagic ecosystems (Belliveau et al, 1991 ;Hermansson et al, 1987 ;Kobori et al, 1984 ;Reyes et al, 1999 ;Sizemore & Colwell 1977 ;Sobecky et al, 1997). However, few studies have attempted to assess plasmid diversity and distribution in marine environments by molecular typing due to a lack of inc\rep DNA probes derived from plasmids found in marine bacterial populations (Dahlberg et al, 1997 ;Sobecky et al, 1998).…”
Section: Abbreviation : Bhr Broad-host-rangementioning
confidence: 99%