2022
DOI: 10.4014/jmb.2210.10044
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Resistome Study in Aquatic Environments

Abstract: Since the first discovery of antibiotics, introduction of new antibiotics has been coupled with the occurrence of antibiotic resistant bacteria (ARB) and antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs). Rapid dissemination of ARB and ARGs in the aquatic environments has become a global concern. ARB and ARGs have been already disseminated in the aquatic environments via various routes. Main hosts of most of ARGs were found to belong to Gammaproteobacteria class, including clinically important potential pathogens. Transmissi… Show more

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Cited by 16 publications
(7 citation statements)
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“…(FP105 and FP233‐J200) that were isolated from Chilean rainbow trout farms (Concha et al., 2021) and (ii) Chryseobacterium balustinum recovered from rainbow trout in the UK (Verner‐Jeffreys et al., 2017). Considering that oxytetracycline is the most widely used antimicrobial in the freshwater phase of salmonid farming in Chile, the increasing detection of tet (X)‐carrying flavobacterial representatives suggests a growing risk of therapeutic failure and prompts the need for continuous monitoring of this gene, which could spread easily in the freshwater fish‐farming environment (Shin et al., 2023). In a previous study, the tet (X) gene was detected in the bacterial isolates FP105 and FP233‐J200 isolated from a fin lesion (FP105) and the kidney (FP223‐J200) of diseased rainbow trout positively diagnosed with flavobacteriosis and sampled from two freshwater Chilean farms located in the south of Chile (Llanquihue Lake and Cude River , respectively) (Ayala et al., 2017; Concha et al., 2021).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…(FP105 and FP233‐J200) that were isolated from Chilean rainbow trout farms (Concha et al., 2021) and (ii) Chryseobacterium balustinum recovered from rainbow trout in the UK (Verner‐Jeffreys et al., 2017). Considering that oxytetracycline is the most widely used antimicrobial in the freshwater phase of salmonid farming in Chile, the increasing detection of tet (X)‐carrying flavobacterial representatives suggests a growing risk of therapeutic failure and prompts the need for continuous monitoring of this gene, which could spread easily in the freshwater fish‐farming environment (Shin et al., 2023). In a previous study, the tet (X) gene was detected in the bacterial isolates FP105 and FP233‐J200 isolated from a fin lesion (FP105) and the kidney (FP223‐J200) of diseased rainbow trout positively diagnosed with flavobacteriosis and sampled from two freshwater Chilean farms located in the south of Chile (Llanquihue Lake and Cude River , respectively) (Ayala et al., 2017; Concha et al., 2021).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The tetA and bla TEM genes, coding for tetracycline and β-lactam resistance respectively, were the least detected and quantified indicators. These two genes, along with sul1 and intI1 , are considered ubiquitous in aquatic environments (Shin et al, 2023 ). Their low detection in plankton samples compared to sul1 and intI1 could be explained by the fact that these two genes are present at a concentration below the limit of quantification of qPCR reactions.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The occurrence of ARGs viz. bla (bla CTX-M , bla TEM ), tet (tetO, tetQ, tetW), sul (sul1, sul2), and ermB has been reported from ARB present in the riverine systems, municipal wastewater treatment plants, pharmaceutical industries effluents, and irrigated soils (Karkman et al, 2018;Grenni, 2022;Cho et al, 2023;Shin et al, 2023). Therefore, there is an urgent need for environmental monitoring of ARB and ARGs in aquatic environments for limiting the transmission of antibiotic resistance.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%