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      Antibiotic susceptibility patterns and resistance genes of starter cultures and probiotic bacteria used in food.

      Systematic and applied microbiology
      Animals, Anti-Bacterial Agents, pharmacology, Bifidobacterium, drug effects, genetics, Cultured Milk Products, microbiology, Food Microbiology, Food Technology, standards, Genes, Bacterial, Lactobacillus, Meat Products, Pediococcus, RNA, Bacterial, RNA, Ribosomal, 16S, Staphylococcus, Switzerland, Tetracycline Resistance

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          Abstract

          A survey of starter and probiotic cultures was carried out to determine the current antibiotic resistance situation in microbial food additives in Switzerland. Two hundred isolates from 90 different sources were typed by molecular and other methods to belong to the genera Lactobacillus (74 samples), Staphylococcus (33 samples), Bifidobacterium (6 samples), Pediococcus (5 samples), or were categorized as lactococci or streptococci (82 samples). They were screened for phenotypic resistances to 20 antibiotics by the disk diffusion method. Twenty-seven isolates exhibiting resistances that are not an intrinsic feature of the respective genera were further analyzed by microarray hybridization as a tool to trace back phenotypic resistances to specific genetic determinants. Their presence was finally verified by PCR amplification or Southern hybridization. These studies resulted in the detection of the tetracycline resistance gene tet(K) in 5 Staphylococcus isolates used as meat starter cultures, the tetracycline resistance gene tet(W) in the probiotic cultures Bifidobacterium lactis DSM 10140 and Lactobacillus reuteri SD 2112 (residing on a plasmid), and the lincosamide resistance gene lnu(A) (formerly linA) in L. reuteri SD 2112.

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