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Citrobacter as a gastrointestinal pathogen, its prevalence and molecular characterization of antimicrobial resistant isolates in food-producing animals in Morogoro, Tanzania

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dc.creator Medardus, J. J.
dc.date 2018-10-10T06:02:00Z
dc.date 2018-10-10T06:02:00Z
dc.date 2017
dc.date.accessioned 2022-10-25T08:53:53Z
dc.date.available 2022-10-25T08:53:53Z
dc.identifier 0856 - 1451
dc.identifier https://www.suaire.sua.ac.tz/handle/123456789/2628
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/94253
dc.description Proceeding of the 35 scientific conference of the Tanzania Veterinary association, Volume 35: 133-139
dc.description Citrobacter is a gastrointestinal commensal of man and animals. The zoonotic Citrobacter spp. infection can occur if food products of animal origin are not hygienically handled. Therefore, the prevalence, antimicrobial resistance profile and resistance transmission mechanism of Citrobacter spp. in food-producing animals in Tanzania needs to be understood. Citrobacter isolates were recovered from 2.4% of the total of 1099 samples from apparently healthy animals. Citrobacter isolates were detected in 3.0% and 1.9% of the swine and the cattle samples, respectively. Over 80% of food products contamination with Citrobacter isolates originated from slaughtered cattle carcasses just before meat is transported to retail stores. About 62% of the isolates detected were resistant to at least one antimicrobial, whereas, 38.5% of the resistant isolates were exhibiting resistance to three or more antibiotic classes. All 26 presumptive Citrobacter isolates were screened for invA, intI1 and 16S rRNA. None of the isolates carried invA. Nearly 19% of the MDR Citrobacter isolates were found to carry an intI1. All intI1-positive isolates contained resistance gene cassettes dfrA1, dfrA7 and dfrA15. Detection of resistance gene cassettes in the MDR Citrobacter isolates in animals and animal products represents a potential source for horizontal transfer of antimicrobial resistance genes and mobile genetic elements between pathogenic and non-pathogenic bacteria in the microbial population. The findings indicate that animal feces could one of the potential sources for contamination of animal products along the food production chain.
dc.format application/pdf
dc.language en
dc.publisher TANZANIA VETERINARY ASSOCIATION
dc.subject MDR Citrobacter
dc.subject Food-producing animals
dc.subject Antimicrobial resistance
dc.subject Class 1 integrons
dc.subject Gene cassettes
dc.title Citrobacter as a gastrointestinal pathogen, its prevalence and molecular characterization of antimicrobial resistant isolates in food-producing animals in Morogoro, Tanzania
dc.type Conferencce Proceedings


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