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Evaluation of levels of antibiotic resistance in groundwater-derived <Emphasis Type="Italic">E. coli</Emphasis> isolates in the Midwest of Ireland and elucidation of potential predictors of resistance
Authors:Jean O’Dwyer  Paul Hynds  Matthieu Pot  Catherine C Adley  Michael P Ryan
Institution:1.Department of Biological Sciences, School of Natural Sciences,University of Limerick,Limerick,Ireland;2.Environmental Health and Sustainability Institute,Dublin Institute of Technology,Dublin 7,Ireland;3.Ecole Supérieure d’Ingénieurs en Agroalimentaire de Bretagne atlantique (ESIAB),Plouzané,France;4.Microbiology Laboratory, Department of Chemical Sciences, School of Natural Sciences,University of Limerick,Limerick,Ireland;5.Industrial Biochemistry Programme, Department of Chemical Sciences, School of Natural Sciences,University of Limerick,Limerick,Ireland
Abstract:Antibiotic-resistant (pathogenic and non-pathogenic) organisms and genes are now acknowledged as significant emerging aquatic contaminants with potentially adverse human and ecological health impacts, and thus require monitoring. This study is the first to investigate levels of resistance among Irish groundwater (private wells) samples; Escherichia coli isolates were examined against a panel of commonly prescribed human and veterinary therapeutic antibiotics, followed by determination of the causative factors of resistance. Overall, 42 confirmed E. coli isolates were recovered from a groundwater-sampling cohort. Resistance to the human panel of antibiotics was moderate; nine (21.4%) E. coli isolates demonstrated resistance to one or more human antibiotics. Conversely, extremely high levels of resistance to veterinary antibiotics were found, with all isolates presenting resistance to one or more veterinary antibiotics. Particularly high levels of resistance (93%) were found with respect to the aminoglycoside class of antibiotics. Results of statistical analysis indicate a significant association between the presence of human (multiple) antibiotic resistance (p?=?0.002–0.011) and both septic tank density and the presence of vulnerable sub-populations (<5 years). For the veterinary antibiotics, results point to a significant relationship (p?=?<0.001) between livestock (cattle) density and the prevalence of multiple antibiotic resistant E. coli. Groundwater continues to be an important resource in Ireland, particularly in rural areas; thus, results of this preliminary study offer a valuable insight into the prevalence of antibiotic resistance in the hydrogeological environment and establish a need for further research with a larger geological diversity.
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