Urban and agricultural soils in Southern California are a reservoir of carbapenem‐resistant bacteria

Abstract Carbapenems are last‐resort β‐lactam antibiotics used in healthcare facilities to treat multidrug‐resistant infections. Thus, most studies on identifying and characterizing carbapenem‐resistant bacteria (CRB) have focused on clinical settings. Relatively, little is still known about the dis...

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Main Authors: Nicolas V. Lopez, Cameron J. Farsar, Dana E. Harmon, Cristian Ruiz
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2020-06-01
Series:MicrobiologyOpen
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/mbo3.1034
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spelling doaj-68ba7f38db874328bb25ed9c40e976812020-11-25T03:13:29ZengWileyMicrobiologyOpen2045-88272020-06-01961247126310.1002/mbo3.1034Urban and agricultural soils in Southern California are a reservoir of carbapenem‐resistant bacteriaNicolas V. Lopez0Cameron J. Farsar1Dana E. Harmon2Cristian Ruiz3Department of Biology California State University Northridge Northridge CA USADepartment of Biology California State University Northridge Northridge CA USADepartment of Biology California State University Northridge Northridge CA USADepartment of Biology California State University Northridge Northridge CA USAAbstract Carbapenems are last‐resort β‐lactam antibiotics used in healthcare facilities to treat multidrug‐resistant infections. Thus, most studies on identifying and characterizing carbapenem‐resistant bacteria (CRB) have focused on clinical settings. Relatively, little is still known about the distribution and characteristics of CRBs in the environment, and the role of soil as a potential reservoir of CRB in the United States remains unknown. Here, we have surveyed 11 soil samples from 9 different urban or agricultural locations in the Los Angeles–Southern California area to determine the prevalence and characteristics of CRB in these soils. All samples tested contained CRB with a frequency of <10 to 1.3 × 104 cfu per gram of soil, with most agricultural soil samples having a much higher relative frequency of CRB than urban soil samples. Identification and characterization of 40 CRB from these soil samples revealed that most of them were members of the genera Cupriavidus, Pseudomonas, and Stenotrophomonas. Other less prevalent genera identified among our isolated CRB, especially from agricultural soils, included the genera Enterococcus, Bradyrhizobium, Achromobacter, and Planomicrobium. Interestingly, all of these carbapenem‐resistant isolates were also intermediate or resistant to at least 1 noncarbapenem antibiotic. Further characterization of our isolated CRB revealed that 11 Stenotrophomonas, 3 Pseudomonas, 1 Enterococcus, and 1 Bradyrhizobium isolates were carbapenemase producers. Our findings show for the first time that both urban and agricultural soils in Southern California are an underappreciated reservoir of bacteria resistant to carbapenems and other antibiotics, including carbapenemase‐producing CRB.https://doi.org/10.1002/mbo3.1034AchromobacterBradyrhizobiumcarbapenemasecarbapenem‐resistant bacteriaCupriavidusEnterococcus
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Nicolas V. Lopez
Cameron J. Farsar
Dana E. Harmon
Cristian Ruiz
spellingShingle Nicolas V. Lopez
Cameron J. Farsar
Dana E. Harmon
Cristian Ruiz
Urban and agricultural soils in Southern California are a reservoir of carbapenem‐resistant bacteria
MicrobiologyOpen
Achromobacter
Bradyrhizobium
carbapenemase
carbapenem‐resistant bacteria
Cupriavidus
Enterococcus
author_facet Nicolas V. Lopez
Cameron J. Farsar
Dana E. Harmon
Cristian Ruiz
author_sort Nicolas V. Lopez
title Urban and agricultural soils in Southern California are a reservoir of carbapenem‐resistant bacteria
title_short Urban and agricultural soils in Southern California are a reservoir of carbapenem‐resistant bacteria
title_full Urban and agricultural soils in Southern California are a reservoir of carbapenem‐resistant bacteria
title_fullStr Urban and agricultural soils in Southern California are a reservoir of carbapenem‐resistant bacteria
title_full_unstemmed Urban and agricultural soils in Southern California are a reservoir of carbapenem‐resistant bacteria
title_sort urban and agricultural soils in southern california are a reservoir of carbapenem‐resistant bacteria
publisher Wiley
series MicrobiologyOpen
issn 2045-8827
publishDate 2020-06-01
description Abstract Carbapenems are last‐resort β‐lactam antibiotics used in healthcare facilities to treat multidrug‐resistant infections. Thus, most studies on identifying and characterizing carbapenem‐resistant bacteria (CRB) have focused on clinical settings. Relatively, little is still known about the distribution and characteristics of CRBs in the environment, and the role of soil as a potential reservoir of CRB in the United States remains unknown. Here, we have surveyed 11 soil samples from 9 different urban or agricultural locations in the Los Angeles–Southern California area to determine the prevalence and characteristics of CRB in these soils. All samples tested contained CRB with a frequency of <10 to 1.3 × 104 cfu per gram of soil, with most agricultural soil samples having a much higher relative frequency of CRB than urban soil samples. Identification and characterization of 40 CRB from these soil samples revealed that most of them were members of the genera Cupriavidus, Pseudomonas, and Stenotrophomonas. Other less prevalent genera identified among our isolated CRB, especially from agricultural soils, included the genera Enterococcus, Bradyrhizobium, Achromobacter, and Planomicrobium. Interestingly, all of these carbapenem‐resistant isolates were also intermediate or resistant to at least 1 noncarbapenem antibiotic. Further characterization of our isolated CRB revealed that 11 Stenotrophomonas, 3 Pseudomonas, 1 Enterococcus, and 1 Bradyrhizobium isolates were carbapenemase producers. Our findings show for the first time that both urban and agricultural soils in Southern California are an underappreciated reservoir of bacteria resistant to carbapenems and other antibiotics, including carbapenemase‐producing CRB.
topic Achromobacter
Bradyrhizobium
carbapenemase
carbapenem‐resistant bacteria
Cupriavidus
Enterococcus
url https://doi.org/10.1002/mbo3.1034
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