Antibiotic Resistance: Phages Can Transfer It In Chicken Meat
Antibiotic-resistant bacteria are on the rise and they pose a
global threat to public health. Common antibiotics are often ineffective
in treating infectious diseases because pathogens acquire resistance
genes. These antimicrobial resistance genes are obtained in different
ways.
There are different explanations for how resistances are transferred and a now study found phages -
viruses that exclusively infect bacteria
- in chicken meat that are able to transfer antimicrobial resistance to
bacteria. Phages do not directly pose a risk to humans because they can
only infect bacteria. No other cells or organisms can be infected.
Researchers isolated phages from 50 chicken samples purchased from
Austrian supermarkets, street markets and butchers. They found phages in
49 samples. Their analysis showed that one quarter of the phages under
study were able to transduce antimicrobial resistance to E. coli
bacteria under laboratory conditions. They transduced resistance to
kanamycin, tetracycline, ampicillin, and chloramphenicol. No phage was
able to transduce resistance to an extended-spectrum beta-lactam
resistance (ESBL).
Phages infect bacteria and are able to transfer genes during this process. Photo: Dinhopl/Vetmeduni Vienna
"The most frequent way is the transfer via mobile genetic elements
such as plasmids, or via transposons, the so-called jumping genes,"
explains Friederike Hilbert, scientist at the Institute of Meat Hygiene
at the Vetmeduni Vienna. "Transfer of resistances via phages was thought
to play a minor role so far. This mechanism could also be important in
clinical settings, where multiresistant pathogens are on the rise. We
assume that phages acquire resistance genes from already resistant
bacteria and then transfer those genes to other bacteria. Our results
could explain why resistances spread so rapidly among bacteria."
Catalysts for evolution
Scientists have known for a while that phages are able to transduce
genes but this was considered a rare event for genes encoding resistance
to antibiotics. Newer DNA analyses show, however, that phages leave
their signature in bacterial genomes. This way of transfer is presumably
more frequent than thought. Phages may therefore play a major role in
bacterial evolution.
Compared to bacteria, phages are significantly more resistant to
disinfectants. Alcohol, in particular, is hardly active against phages.
"Common disinfection methods are often inappropriate against phages,"
Hilbert underlines. The food industry and also hospitals may choose
disinfectants that are active against bacteria, but might be ineffective
against phages.
Treating bacterial infections with phages has become a promising
alternative combating antimicrobial-resistant pathogens where phages
directly combat bacteria. Hilbert recommends totest therapeutic phages
for their ability to transfer resistance genes. The combination of
phages and multiresistant pathogens could otherwise result in a
hazardous cocktail of phages transferring multiresistance genes."
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