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Early life dynamics of ARG and MGE associated with intestinal virome in neonatal piglets

  • Ruiting Wu
  • , Ze Cao
  • , Yiming Jiang
  • , Wei Chen
  • , Yuan Sun
  • , Qianniu Li
  • , Jiandui Mi
  • , Li Deng
  • , Xindi Liao
  • , Yaoyu Feng
  • , Tian Lan
  • , Jingyun Ma
  • South China Agricultural University
  • Guangdong Laboratory for Lingnan Modern Agriculture
  • National-Local Joint Engineering Research Center for Livestock Breeding
  • Helmholtz Zentrum München German Research Center for Environmental Health
  • Technical University of Munich

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

11 Scopus citations

Abstract

The pre- and post-weaning stages for piglets are critical periods for the maturation of intestinal functions and contamination with antibiotic resistant bacterial pathogens will threaten their intestinal health. The presence of bacteriophage can also alter bacterial populations in the intestine but whether transmission of antibiotic resistance genes (ARG) is affected by phage during maturation of the neonatal piglet intestine is not known. We therefore identified the intestinal virome along with ARGs and mobile genetic elements (MGE) from piglet fecal samples collected from 3 to 28 days representing the different growth stages. We found wide fluctuations for the intestinal virome of weaning piglets and most virus - related antibiotic resistance was derived from temperate phage suggesting a reservoir of multidrug resistance was present in the neonatal porcine gut. Our results provide a comprehensive understanding of ARGs associated with the intestinal virome that therefore represents a potential risk for horizontal ARG transfer to pathogenic bacteria.

Original languageEnglish
JournalVeterinary Microbiology
DOIs
StatePublished - Nov 2022

Keywords

  • ARG
  • Intestinal virome
  • MGE
  • Multidrug resistance
  • Neonatal piglets

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