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      Incidence of antibiotic resistance and virulence determinants among Enterococcus italicus isolates from dairy products.

      Systematic and applied microbiology
      DNA Transposable Elements, genetics, Dairy Products, microbiology, Drug Resistance, Bacterial, Drug Resistance, Multiple, Bacterial, Enterococcus, drug effects, pathogenicity, Food Microbiology, Microbial Sensitivity Tests, Virulence, Virulence Factors

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          Abstract

          The main objective of this work was to investigate the biosafety of Enterococcus italicus, a recently described enterococcal species widely diffused in dairy products. For this purpose, the antibiotic susceptibility and the incidence of virulence factors among 30 E. italicus isolates originating mainly from different Italian cheeses were tested. Although not all 30 isolates showed unique genotypes, PCR fingerprinting evidenced a notable genotypic diversity among the E. italicus collection under study. All isolates were susceptible to vancomycin, gentamicin, erythromycin, ampicillin, chloramphenicol and bacitracin. Five isolates corresponding to three unique genotypes exhibited phenotypic resistance to tetracycline with MICs ranging from 64-256mug/ml. By PCR-based detection, the genetic basis of the Tet(R) phenotype in these strains was linked to the tet(S) gene whereas detection of tet(L) and tet(M) genes and the integrase element int of the Tn916/Tn1545 family of transposons were negative. Likewise, none of the strains appeared to contain any of the tested virulence genes gelE, asaI, cpd, agg, cylA, cylB, cylM, ace and hyl(Efm). The results of this study warrant further research into the environmental dissemination of Tet(R)E. italicus and into the potential transferability of its tet(S) genes.

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