Authors
Dept. of Animal Hygiene and Zoonoses, Fac. Vet. Medicine, Assiut Univ.
Abstract
Keywords
Dept. of Animal Hygiene and Zoonoses,
Fac. Vet. Medicine, Assiut Univ.
Surveillance of methicillin resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) in raw milk and milk handlers with nuc gene sequencing of the isolated strains
(With 2 Tables and 2 Figures)
By
Amal S.M. Sayed and Asmaa A. Hussein
(Received at 4/9/2010)
مدى تواجد methicillin resistant S. aureusفى اللبن الخام والقائمين على حلب الحيوانات ودراسة تتابع nuc geneللعترات المعزولة
أمل سيد محمد سيد ، أسماء عبد الناصر حسين
فى الآونة الأخيرة تزايدت خطورة ميکروبات methicillin resistant S. aureus على صحة الإنسان. ولذلک أجريت هذه الدراسة لتحديد مدى تواجد MRSA فى ألبان المزارع والألبان المباعة فى الأسواق. وتم جمع 100 عينة بصورة عشوائية من اللبن الخام فى المزارع والمباع فى الأسواق ، بواقع 50 عينة من کل منهم، لدراسة مدى تلوثها بهذه البکتريا. کما تم فحص مسحات من ايدى العاملين والقائمين على حلب الحيوانات بتلک المزارع لمعرفة دورهم فى نقل.MRSA وقد أسفرت النتائج عن تواجدMRSA بنسب 22 ، 8 % فى کل من لبن المزارع واللبن الخام المباع فى الأسواق على التوالى. وقد وجد ان 55.6 % من العترات المعزولة قادرة على افرازالسموم وکانSE typeC هو النـوع السائـد بنسبـة 90% ، ثم SE typeB بنسبة 10%. وقد تم عزلMRSA من القائمين على حلب ورعاية الحيوانات الحلابة بنسبة 10% وکانت 66.7% من العترات المعزولة القادرة على إفراز السموم وکان SE type C هو النوع السائد. وقد اظهرت النتائج ان 27.8 % من العزلات تحمل nuc gene وقد تم عمل تحليل جينى لتحديد مدى تقارب العزلات ، هذا وتمت مناقشة الأهمية الصحية والوبائية لميکروبات MRSA وعزلاتها المختلفة والشروط الواجب إتباعها ، وخاصة فى مزارع الألبان من توعية للعاملين بها لمنع تلوث الألبان بهذه الميکروبات لدرء خطرها عن المستهلک.
Summary
The emergence and spread of methicillin resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) infections are considered a global health issue. This study was designed to determine the prevalence of MRSA in milk from dairy herds and markets. The role of milk handlers as a source of MRSA infection had been studied. Genotyping of the isolated MRSA strains was investigated. A total of 100 samples of farm milk and market milk (50 each) as well as 30 hand swabs of milk handlers were collected randomly from Assiut Governorate. Methicillin resistant Staphylococcus aureus was isolatedand enterotoxigenic strains were investigated. Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) was performed to amplify the nuc gene in the isolated strains. Moreover, sequencing of the amplified PCR products and phylogenetic analysis was performed. MRSA strains were isolated from 13.85% of the examined samples (22% and 8% of the examined farm and market milk, respectively) and 55.6% of the isolated MRSA strains were enterotoxigenic. In this study, staphylococcal enterotoxin C was the most enterotoxin detected in the isolated MRSA strains with a rate of 90%. However, enterotoxin type B was detected in 10% of the isolated MRSA strains. In addition, 25% of MRSA strains isolated from market milk were enterotoxigenic with one strain belong to type C. Enterotoxigenic MRSA strains were isolated with a rate of 66.7% from milk handlers and enterotoxin type C was the type of toxin produced by these strains. Nuc gene was detected in 5 (27.8%) out of the 18 MRSA strains. Phylogenetic analysis of the amplified products sequences was done and the results were discussed. Public health hazard of MRSA was discussed and suggestive measures for control were explained.
Key words: MRSA, milk, milk handler, PCR, Nuc gene, sequencing.
Introduction
The emergence and spread of methicillin resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) infections are considered a global health issue (Normanno et al., 2007). MRSA organisms are frequently resistant to most of the commonly used antimicrobial agents, including the aminoglycosides, macrolids, chloramphinicol, tetracycline and fluoroquinolones (Mandell et al., 1995). Although S. aureus is a serious problem in dairy production causing subclinical and clinical mastitis in dairy herds, there is a limited number of publications on the epidemiological aspects of MRSA infections in dairy herds (Devriese and Hommez, 1975; Seguin et al., 1999; Lee, 2003 and Normanno et al., 2007).
New evidence also suggests that domestic animals including food animals are capable of serving as reservoirs and shedders of MRSA and that transmission between host species may be possible (Loo et al., 2007 and Normanno et al., 2007). Human handlers, infected animals, milking equipments and the environment are implicated as possible sources of bulk milk contamination in dairy herds (Zadoks et al., 2002). Recent studies have shown genetic similarity between MRSA isolates from food animals, including dairy cows and those in humans, suggesting a mode of transmission between them (Juhasz-Kazanyitz et al., 2007 and Moon et al., 2007).
Food borne acquired MRSA outbreaks have been reported and most of them occurred from milk and milk products (Kluytmans et al., 1995; De Buyser et al., 2001; Jones et al., 2002 and Lee, 2003). Food associated intoxication are commonly mediated by heat-stable staphylococcal enterotoxins (Wilson et al., 1991). To date, 18 staphylococcal enterotoxins (SEs) have been described and designed SEA to SEE; SEG to SER and SEU (Dings et al., 2000; Jarraud et al., 2001; Leterte et al., 2003).
This study was designed to determine the prevalence of MRSA in milk from dairy farms and markets. The role of milk handlers as a source of MRSA infection had been studied and genotyping of the isolated MRSA strains was investigated.
Materials and Methods
Sample collection
A total of 100 samples of farm milk and market milk (50 each) were collected randomly from Assiut Governorate in the period from March to August 2008. Moreover, 30 swabs of hands of milk handlers were obtained. Each swab was emulsified in sterile physiological saline.
Isolation of methicillin resistant S. aureus (MRSA):
1ml of each milk sample or 1ml of swab emulsion were enriched in tryptone soya broth (TSB) containing 70mg /ml NaCl and incubated at 37oC for 18- 20 h. A loopfull from the enriched media was plated onto selective medium for MRSA isolation (Mannitol salt agar containing oxacillin 4 mg/litre) and incubated at 37o C for 24-48h. MRSA strains are capable of fermenting mannitol within 24h. (Indicated by a color change from red to yellow) however, few strains of MRSA ferment mannitol slowly, so negative plates after 24h should be incubated for additional 24h (Compernolle et al., 2007). Presumptive colonies were identified as S. aureus by using conventional methods including Gram stain, catalase, DNase, Voges-Proskauer and mannitol fermentation tests.
Coagulase test:
Tube coagulase test for detection of free coagulase was performed with rabbit plasma (BioMereux). The test was performed by diluting the plasma in freshly prepared normal saline (1:6). Four pure colonies were emulsified in 1ml diluted plasma and incubated at 37o C. The tubes were inspected at 1h, 2h, 3h and 4h and incubated overnight if no clot formation was observed (Baired, 1996).
Detection of Staphylococcal enterotoxins (SEs):
The isolated S. aureus strains were grown in tryptone soya broth and incubated at 37o C for 24h. The cultures were centrifuged for 5 min. at 3500 rpm /15oC. The supernatant was filtered through 0.45µm low-protein binding filter and the filtrate was used for enterotoxin detection. Detection of enterotoxins (A,B,C,D,E) was done by using ELISA test kit (RIDASCREEN SET A,B,C,D,E (R- Biopharm AG, Darmstadt, Germany) according to the manufacturer's procedure.
PCR assay for detection of nuc gene:
DNA of the S. aureus colonies was extracted by using QIAamp DNA mini kit (Qiagen, GmbH) according to the manufacturer's protocol. The nuc gene, which encodes thermonuclease was used as a target DNA to identify S. aureus .The primers
F 5´-GCGATTGATGGTGATACGGTT-3´ and
R 5´AGCCAAGCCTTGACGAACTAAAGC -3´ (Brakstad et al., 1992) were used to amplify nuc gene. The Amplification was carried out in 0.5ml tubes in a final reaction volume 50μl. The PCR mixture consisted of 1.5 mM MgCl2, 10mM Tris-HCl (pH 9.0). 50mM KCl. 0.1% Triton®X-100, 200µM (each) deoxynucleotide triphosphate, 0.2µM of each primer and 0.625U Taq polymerase. The PCR was conducted in a Biometra Thermal cycler (Biometra – Germany) and the amplification condition was one cycle of 95oC for 10 min, followed by 37cycles of 94oC for 1min, 50oC for 30 sec, and 72oC for 1.5 min and final extension at 72oC for 5 min. PCR products (10μl) were analyzed by electrophoreses on 2% agarose gel containing ethidium bromide and visualized under UV illumination and PCR product size is 270 bp.
Sequencing of the amplified PCR products:
Sequences of the PCR products were determined by the dideoxy chain termination method using Big Dye Terminator v 3.1 Cycle sequencing Kit according to the manufacturer's cycle sequencing protocol.
Phylogenetic analysis:
The nuc gene sequences were aligned with CLUSTAL W software (Thompson et al., 1994) and examined using the program MEGA (Molecular Evolutionary Genetics Analysis) version 4 (Tamura et al., 2007). Phylogenetic tree was constructed by the neighbor-joining method with the distance algorithms in the MEGA package. Bootstrap values were determined with 1000 replicates of the data set and compared with S. aureus strains registered in the DDBJ/EMBL/GeneBank including: S. aureus EMRSA 16 (Accession No: ADAT01000022.1); S. aureus ST 398 (Accession No: AM990992.1), S. aureus ED 133 (Accession No: CP001996.1), S. aureus JKD 6008 (Accession No: CP002120.1), S. aureus TW 20 (Accession No: FN433596.1).
Results
Table 1: Prevalence of MRSA strains in the examined samples
Source of samples |
No. of samples |
MRSA
|
% |
MRSA (nuc gene) |
% |
Farm milk |
50 |
11 |
22 |
3 |
27.3 |
Market milk |
50 |
4 |
8 |
1 |
25 |
Milk handlers |
30 |
3 |
10 |
1 |
33.3 |
Total |
130 |
18 |
13.85 |
5 |
27.8 |
Table 2: Incidence of enterotoxigenic MRSA with enterotoxins typing
Source of samples |
MRSA |
Enterotoxigenic strains |
Type of toxins |
|||||
A |
B |
C |
D |
E |
||||
|
|
No. |
% |
No.(%) |
No.(%) |
No.(%) |
No.(%) |
No.(%) |
Farm milk |
11 |
7 |
63.6 |
- |
1(14.3%) |
6(85.7%) |
- |
- |
Market milk |
4 |
1 |
25 |
- |
- |
1(100%) |
- |
- |
Milk handlers |
3 |
2 |
66.7 |
- |
- |
2(100%) |
- |
- |
Total |
18 |
10 |
55.6 |
- |
1(10%) |
9( 90%) |
- |
- |
Fig. 1: PCR identification of MRSA, nuc gene
M: 100 bp DNA size marker. Lanes 1, 2, 3, 4, 5: MRSA strains positive for nuc gene (270bp).
|
Fig. 2: Phylogenetic tree of nuc gene sequences
MRSA1, MRSA 4, MRSA 5 strains obtained from farm milk
MRSA 2: strain obtained from market milk
MRSA 3 strain obtained from milk handler.
S. aureus strains (EMRSA 16, S. aureus ST 398, S. aureus ED 133, S. aureus JKD 6008, S. aureus TW 20)
registered in the DDBJ/EMBL/Gene Bank.
Discussion
The improper use of antibiotics in dairy herds especially in mastitis control in lactating and dry cows had lead to the emergence of bacterial resistant strains into the food chain and thus considered a public health hazard (White and McDermontt, 2001and Lee, 2003).
Coagulase positive MRSA strains were isolated from 13.85% of the examined samples (Table 1). MRSA strains were isolated from 22% and 8% of the examined farm and market milk, respectively (Table 1). It has been isolated with a lower prevalence rates (3%) and (2.8%) in other studies (Lee, 2006 and Moon et al., 2007), respectively. Higher prevalence rate (42.9%) was reported in another study (Lee, 2003).
In this study 55.6% of the isolated MRSA strains (Table 2) were enterotoxigenic. A similar result was reported previously by Jorgensen et al., 2005. However, variable rates of enterotoxigenic MRSA strains were reported 42.9% and 74% by Adesiyun et al., 1998 and Valle et al., 1990, respectively. Staphyloccol enterotoxin C was the most enterotoxin detected in the isolated MRSA strains with a rate of 90% however, enterotoxin type B was detected in 10% of the isolated MRSA strains (Table 2). Our result is in concurrent with Wilson et al., 1991 who reported that Staph enterotoxin type C was the enterotoxin most commonly associated with dairy products. 63.6% of the isolated MRSA strains from farm milk were enterotoxigenic where, 6 (85.7%) strains belong to type C and one strain belong to type B (14.3%) (Table 2). However, 25% of MRSA strains isolated from market milk were enterotoxigenic with one strain belong to type C (Table 2). Normanno et al., 2007 reported that the most frequently detected (SE) was SED alone or in association with either SEA and SEC.
Enterotoxigenic MRSA strains were isolated from 10% of the examined milk handlers (Table 1) and 66.7% from the strains produced enterotoxin type C (Table 2). However, S. aureus strains were isolated from hand swabs of milkers belonged to SEC, SEB and SEA with a rate of 32.4%, 24.3% and 13.5%, respectively (Adesiyun et al., 1998).
Corrente et al. (2005) found that SEA was the prevalent SE synthesized by MRSA strains isolated from humans. The presence of enterotoxigenic strains in milk handlers emphasizes the role of human as an important reservoir for MRSA and their potential role of contamination of milk during handling.
Multiple studies have characterized the genotypic diversity of S. aureus from cases of bovine mastitis (Sabour et al., 2004) but few have investigated S. aureus from bulk milk (Casciano et al., 2003 and Scherrer et al., 2004). Knowledge about the genotypic variation among S. aureus isolates from bulk milk could aid in the implementation of strategies to decrease S. aureus level in bulk milk and could be useful in future investigation of staph food poisoning (SFP) from raw milk products in the presence of certain genotypes in the product might point to a possible source of contamination (Jorgensen et al., 2005). Moreover, DNA sequencing is a useful tool in epidemiological investigation to observe the genotypic variation and to determine the relation between the isolates.
Although the isolated MRSA strains was identified by conventional methods, only 5 (27.8%) out of the 18 MRSA strains were positive for nuc gene by PCR (Table 1 & Figure 1). This discrepancy could be explained by polymorphism of primer annealing site or partial deletion of the nuc gene in the MRSA negative strains (Klaassen et al., 2003). Similar results were reported by Loo et al. (2007) and Kateete et al. (2010). The possibility of mutation needs to be considered in the design of probes and primers to avoid false negative or inaccurate quantitative PCR. The use of single species specific gene as target for molecular based MRSA screening may lead to misidentification. It is better to incorporate an additional internal species specific gene detection to increase strain coverage and identification (Van Leeuwen et al., 2008).
The phylogenetic analysis (Figure 2) classified the MRSA 4 and MRSA 5 into a separate clade from MRSA 1, MRSA 2 and MRSA 3. MRSA 4 and MRSA 5 are closely related to each other however, both of them had relatively low level of homology with sequences from MRSA 1, MRSA 2 and MRSA 3. Interestingly, MRSA 4 and MRSA 5 were isolated from the same farm and phylogenetic analysis revealed that they are epidemiologically related. On the other hand, MRSA 1 and MRSA2 are epidemiologically related, although MRSA 1 was isolated from farm milk and MRSA 2 were isolated from market milk and this result points out to the same source of MRSA from the farm. The genetic variation of nuc gene sequence between MRSA 1, MRSA 2 and MRSA 4 & MARSA 5 may be attributed to geographic variation. MRSA 3 was isolated from milk handler and had relatively low level of homology with MRSA 1, MRSA 2, MRSA 4 and MRSA 5. This result reveals the genetic variation between the strains isolated from milk and that isolated from human. The sequence of MRSA strains obtained in this study was compared with 5 strains registered in the DDBJ/EMBL/Gene Bank and phylogenetic analysis revealed that MRSA 1 and MRSA 2 are closely related to S. aureus strains (EMRSA 16, S. aureus ST 398, S. aureus ED 133, S. aureus JKD 6008, S. aureus TW 20) registered in the DDBJ/EMBL/Gene Bank. However, MRSA 3, MRSA 4 and MRSA 5 had relatively low homology with them (Figure 2).
Presence of MRSA strains in milk may constitute a lethal risk for consumers, especially for immunocompromised individuals where their immune system are not able to act as barriers to prevent colonization of the gastrointestinal tract (Kluytmans et al., 1995). It is recommended that infected cows with S. aureus should be rapidly culled or treated early with antimicrobial dry cow therapy to prevent the transmission to healthy cows and to control the somatic cell count in bulk tank milk. Efficient chilling of bulk milk until pasteurization, followed by efforts to prevent recontamination minimizes the risk of SFP. Better sanitary education of milk handlers on sanitary practices focusing on their potential role as reservoirs and spreaders of food borne pathogens is recommended.
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