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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, December 2007, p. 7906-7911, Vol. 73, No. 24
0099-2240/07/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/AEM.00973-07
Copyright © 2007, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Antibiotic Resistance in Food-Borne Bacterial Contaminants in Vietnam
Thi Thu Hao Van,1
George Moutafis,1
Linh Thuoc Tran,2 and
Peter J. Coloe1*
Biotechnology and Environmental Biology, School of Applied Sciences, RMIT University, Bundoora West Campus, Bundoora, Melbourne, Victoria 3083, Australia,1
Faculty of Biology, University of Natural Sciences, VNU-HCMC, Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam2
Received 30 April 2007/
Accepted 11 October 2007

ABSTRACT
This study was conducted to examine the rate of contamination
and the molecular characteristics of enteric bacteria isolated
from a selection of food sources in Vietnam. One hundred eighty
raw food samples were tested; 60.8% of meat samples and 18.0%
of shellfish samples were contaminated with
Salmonella spp.,
and more than 90% of all food sources contained
Escherichia coli. The isolates were screened for antibiotic resistance against
15 antibiotics, and 50.5% of
Salmonella isolates and 83.8% of
E. coli isolates were resistant to at least one antibiotic.
Isolates were examined for the presence of mobile genetic elements
conferring antibiotic resistance. Fifty-seven percent of
E. coli and 13% of
Salmonella isolates were found to contain integrons,
and some isolates contained two integrons. Sequencing results
revealed that the integrons harbored various gene cassettes,
including
aadA1,
aadA2, and
aadA5 (resistance to streptomycin
and spectinomycin),
aacA4 (resistance to aminoglycosides), the
dihydrofolate reductase gene cassettes
dhfrXII,
dfrA1, and
dhfrA17 (trimethoprim resistance), the beta-lactamase gene
blaPSE1 (ampicillin
resistance), and
catB3 (chloramphenicol resistance). Plasmids
were also detected in all 23 antibiotic-resistant
Salmonella isolates and in 33
E. coli isolates. Thirty-five percent of
the
Salmonella isolates and 76% of the
E. coli isolates contained
plasmids of more than 95 kb, and some of the isolates contained
two large plasmids. Conjugation experiments showed the successful
transfer of all or part of the antibiotic resistance phenotypes
among the
Salmonella and
E. coli food isolates. Our results
show that enteric bacteria in raw food samples from Vietnam
contain a pool of mobile genetic elements and that the transfer
of antibiotic resistance can readily occur between similar bacteria.

INTRODUCTION
Food contamination with antibiotic-resistant bacteria can be
a major threat to public health, as the antibiotic resistance
determinants can be transferred to other bacteria of human clinical
significance. The prevalence of antimicrobial resistance among
food-borne pathogens has increased during recent decades (
9,
15,
18,
56), possibly as the result of selection pressure created
by the use of antimicrobials in food-producing animals (
1,
4,
11,
55,
59). The coexistence of resistance genes with mobile
elements such as plasmids, transposons, and integrons facilitates
the rapid spread of antibiotic resistance genes among bacteria
(
53). Molecular analysis of antibiotic resistance genes and
antibiotic-resistant mobile elements has shown that identical
elements were found in bacteria that colonize both animals and
humans, suggesting a role for raw foods in the dissemination
of resistant bacteria and resistance genes to humans via the
food chain (
33,
44,
55).
Information on the phenotypes and genotypes of antimicrobial resistance in food-borne microorganisms is largely restricted to first-world countries, and there is a paucity of information on what is happening in developing countries. Where they are reported, rates of resistance to antibiotics of bacteria originating from meat were high in developing countries (2, 3, 16, 37, 54), possibly as the result of the inappropriate or uncontrolled use of antibiotics in farming practices. Therefore, the study of antibiotic resistance in developing countries is important as the information could enhance prudent use of antibiotics in food production. In Vietnam, antibiotic resistance has been reported to occur in human bacterial isolates, including Salmonella enterica serovar Typhi and other diarrhea-causing pathogens (5, 12, 22, 26, 40). However, as far as we are aware, there has been very little published about the occurrence of antibiotic-resistant bacteria in raw food samples in Vietnam and even less about the molecular characteristics of these antibiotic-resistant bacteria. This study was conducted to address some of these issues and to provide a current baseline of information on molecular characteristics of antibiotic resistance of Salmonella and Escherichia coli isolates from foods commonly sold in the marketplace in Vietnam. The isolates were investigated for the presence of class 1 integrons and their associated gene cassettes and for the presence of plasmids. The transferability of antibiotic resistance was examined by conjugation.

MATERIALS AND METHODS
Isolation and identification of E. coli and Salmonella spp.
One hundred eighty samples of meat, consisting of beef (
n =
50 samples), chicken/poultry (
n = 30 samples), pork (
n = 50
samples), and shellfish (
n = 50 samples), were purchased from
various markets and supermarkets around Ho Chi Minh City between
February and June 2004 for the isolation and identification
of
Salmonella spp. and
E. coli. Forty-three samples from chicken
feces were also collected for
E. coli isolation from chickens
less than 1 month old. The procedures for the isolation of
Salmonella spp. and
E. coli were based on the Nordic Committee on Food
Analysis methods (
41,
42).
Salmonella isolates were further
grouped with commercial monovalent sera (Remel, Inc.), used
according to the manufacturer's instructions. The representative
salmonella isolates were further serotyped by the Microbiological
Diagnostic Unit, Melbourne University, Australia.
Antibiotic susceptibility tests.
Antibiotic resistance of E. coli and Salmonella isolates was determined by the disk diffusion method using the standard procedure of the Clinical and Laboratory Standards Institute (CLSI, formerly NCCLS) (39). The isolates were classified as susceptible, intermediate, or resistant according to interpretation of the zone diameter standards recommended by CLSI (17). The concentration of the discs (Oxoid, Australia) and the abbreviations of antimicrobial agents used throughout this report are ampicillin (AMP), 10 µg; amoxicillin (AMX), 10 µg; amoxicillin-clavulanic acid (AMC), 30 µg; cephalothin (CEF), 30 µg; chloramphenicol (CHL), 30 µg; ciprofloxacin (CIP), 5 µg; enrofloxacin (ENR), 5 µg; tetracycline (TET), 30 µg; gentamicin (GEN), 10 µg; kanamycin (KAN), 30 µg; nalidixic acid (NAL), 30 µg; norfloxacin (NOR), 10 µg; sulfafurazole (SUL), 300 µg; streptomycin (STR), 10 µg; and trimethoprim (TMP), 5 µg. The reference strains Escherichia coli ATCC 25922 and Staphylococcus aureus ATCC 25923 were used to verify the quality and accuracy of the testing procedures.
Detection of class 1 integrons.
Twenty-three antibiotic-resistant Salmonella isolates and 35 E. coli isolates, which showed the highest degree of resistance among the collection, were examined for the presence of class 1 integrons by PCR using primers and conditions as described previously (36). PCRs were carried out in a total volume 50 µl containing 2 µl of boiled bacterial suspension, each deoxyribonucleotide at a concentration of 0.25 mM, 2 mM MgCl2, 1 U of AmpliTaq Gold DNA polymerase (Roche, Germany), and 0.4 µM of each primer. Thermal cycler reaction conditions included an initial denaturation at 95°C for 5 min, followed by 35 cycles, each of which consisted of denaturation at 95°C for 30 s, annealing time at 56°C for 30 s, and a final 7-min extension at 72°C. Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium strain DT104, which contained 1.0-kb and 1.2-kb integrons, was used as a positive control. PCR products were digested with at least three separate restriction endonucleases. Isolates with the same PCR amplicon sizes and identical restriction patterns were randomly chosen for complete sequence analyses using an ABI Prism BigDye Terminator cycle sequencing Ready Reaction kit (Perkin-Elmer Corp.) according to the manufacturer's protocol and were sequenced at Monash University, Victoria, Australia. The sequences obtained were analyzed using BLAST (http://www.ncbi.nih.gov) and compared with those registered in GenBank.
Plasmid extraction.
The plasmid extraction method used was based on the Kado and Liu method, with some modifications (28). Strains were grown in 10 ml of Luria-Bertani (LB) broth containing appropriate antibiotic at 37°C with shaking to exponential stage. Cells from 1.5 ml of culture were harvested, and the pellet was resuspended in 200 µl of Tris-EDTA buffer. The cells were lysed by the addition of 400 µl of lysis solution (containing 3% [wt/vol] sodium dodecyl sulfate and 50 mM Tris [pH 12.6]). The mixture was incubated at 60°C for 1 h. Proteins and chromosomal DNA were then precipitated by the addition of 900 µl of 1:1 (vol/vol) phenol-chloroform, and the precipitate was removed by centrifugation. The aqueous DNA solution was then freed of phenol by extraction with 1 volume of chloroform. The upper aqueous layer containing the plasmid DNA was collected and was either loaded on a gel for electrophoresis or stored at –20°C. The gel was prepared at 0.7% in 1x Tris-acetate-EDTA buffer, and electrophoresis was carried out at 70 V for 2.5 h. Salmonella serovar Typhimurium strain 82/6915, which contained a single 95-kb plasmid, was used as a control. Sizes of the plasmids were compared using a BAC-Tracker supercoiled ladder, with sizes ranging from 8 to 165 kb (Epicenter). Isolates used for integron detection (except for isolates E/C/15a and E/SF/29) were evaluated for the presence of plasmids.
Conjugation study.
Spread-plate mating and liquid mating methods (30) were used in the conjugation experiments with different donor-recipient combinations. Selected strains which contained plasmids of more than 95 kb were used, including S/C/5 (Salmonella serovar Havana, chicken isolate), S/C/9b (Salmonella serovar Havana, chicken isolate), S/P/24 (Salmonella serovar Anatum, pork isolate), E/C/4a (E. coli, chicken isolate), and E/C/5a (E. coli, chicken isolate). Recipient laboratory strains and strains isolated for this study included E/P/8a (E. coli, pork isolate), E/F/13 (E. coli, chicken feces isolate), E/F/16 (E. coli, chicken feces isolate), E. coli HB101 (E. coli, laboratory strain), E. coli JM109 (E. coli, laboratory strain), S/P/9 (Salmonella serovar Typhimurium, pork isolate), and S/P/13 (Salmonella serovar Anatum, pork isolate). For the spread-plate mating, the donor and recipient strains were grown separately overnight with appropriate antibiotics, and then 100 µl of donor and 100 µl of recipient strains at different concentrations were spread plated onto LB agar plates containing both of the selected antibiotics. In liquid mating, 0.5 ml and 1.0 ml of overnight-incubated donor and recipient broth cultures, respectively, were mixed in 10 ml of LB broth. The mixtures were then incubated overnight without shaking. Then, 0.2-ml volumes of each mixture at different concentration were spread onto LB-agar plates containing both of the selected antibiotics. Colonies from the selector plates were picked off and identified again after plates were incubated at 37°C for 24 h and their antibiotic resistance phenotypes were determined.

RESULTS
Presence of class 1 integrons and resistance gene cassettes in Salmonella spp. and E. coli isolates.
When 180 food samples were examined for
Salmonella spp., 60.8%
of the meat and 18.0% of the shellfish samples were positive,
yielding 91
Salmonella isolates.
E. coli was present in more
than 90% of all food sources. Isolates were screened for antibiotic
resistance against 15 antibiotics, and 50.5% of the
Salmonella isolates were found to be resistant to at least one antibiotic,
and 78 to 89% of these isolates from pork and poultry displayed
this characteristic. On the other hand, 83.8% of
E. coli isolates
were resistant to at least one antibiotic, and the resistance
rates for this group were 100% for pork, chicken, and chicken
feces isolates, and the rates for beef isolates and shellfish
isolates were 65% and 55%, respectively. In addition, multiresistance
(resistance to at least three different classes of antibiotics)
was detected in 20.9% of
Salmonella isolates and in 61.6% of
E. coli isolates. When 23
Salmonella isolates and 35
E. coli isolates were screened for class 1 integrons by PCR, 3/23 (13%)
of the
Salmonella isolates and 20/35 (57.1%) of the
E. coli isolates were positive for the PCR amplification product of
class 1 integrons, with six patterns (2,650, 2,000, 1,700, 1,500,
1,250, and 1,200 bp) detected. Restriction fragment length polymorphism
analysis of the PCR products showed that isolates having the
same amplicon sizes had the same restriction patterns, suggesting
that the gene cassettes in these strains were likely to be identical
(Fig.
1). Sequence analysis of the integron PCR products showed
the presence of classic gene cassettes in the integrons, including
aadA1,
aadA2, and
aadA5 (which confer resistance to streptomycin
and spectinomycin),
aacA4 (which confers resistance to aminoglycosides),
the dihydrofolate reductase gene cassettes
dhfrXII,
dfrA1 and
dhfrA17 (which confer resistance to trimethoprim), the beta-lactamase
gene
blaPSE1 (which confers resistance to ampicillin), and
catB3 (which confers resistance to chloramphenicol). When isolates
contained a gene cassette, the corresponding antibiotic resistance
phenotypes were detected in most of the cases, except for the
E/P/18a isolate, which contained the
dhfrXII gene cassette with
sensitivity to trimethoprim. Resistance to streptomycin in the
presence of the
aadA gene varied from full resistance to intermediate
susceptibility (Table
1).
Plasmid content of Salmonella and E. coli isolates.
The Kado and Liu method (
28) was used to examine
Salmonella and
E. coli isolates for plasmids. The plasmid extraction of
23 antibiotic-resistant
Salmonella isolates and 33
E. coli isolates
showed that all of the isolates tested contained plasmids, and
sizes ranged from less than 8 kb to more than 165 kb. Thirty-five
percent of the
Salmonella isolates and 76% of the
E. coli isolates
contained plasmids of more than 95 kb, and some of the isolates
contained two large plasmids.
Transfer of antibiotic resistance genes in E. coli and Salmonella isolates by conjugation.
The antibiotic susceptibility test of transconjugants showed that the donors could transfer all or part of their resistance phenotypes to the recipients. The plasmid profiles of the donor, the recipient, and the transconjugants were studied for selective donor-recipient combinations. When isolate S/C/5a (Salmonella serovar Havana), which contained plasmids of 115 kb and 140 kb, was used as a donor, it was observed that transconjugants acquired either an AMP/AMX resistance phenotype or an AMP/AMX/SUL/GEN/CHL resistance phenotype, depending on whether the recipients obtained the 115-kb plasmid or the 140-kb plasmid from the donor. Similarly, when the E/C/4a and E/C/5a isolates, which both contained the 120-kb plasmid, were used as donors, the transconjugants were found to acquire the 120-kb plasmid and the corresponding antibiotic resistance phenotype (the AMP/AMX/SUL/GEN/CHL resistance phenotype or the AMP/AMX/SUL resistance phenotype, respectively) (Table 2 and Fig. 2). Therefore, these large plasmids were conjugative and contained many antibiotic resistance genes. It was also noticed in this study that in conjugation, the recipients could acquire plasmids from donors regardless of whether the recipients harbored their own plasmids or not; this observation shows furthermore that conjugation mechanisms could easily occur among the bacterial population.

DISCUSSION
The results demonstrated that raw food samples were heavily
contaminated with enteric bacteria. The rate of
Salmonella contamination
in retail meat samples above 60% is significantly higher than
that reported for other countries (
16,
19,
21,
25,
27,
45,
58,
61). The antibiotic resistance susceptibility results also indicated
alarming multiresistance frequencies for
Salmonella and
E. coli isolates from food, where multiresistance rates of 20.9% for
Salmonella isolates and 61.6% for
E. coli isolates were detected
and most probably reflect the unregulated use of antibiotics
in food-producing animals in the country (
60). It was found
that 78 to 89% of the
Salmonella spp. isolated from pork and
poultry were resistant to one or more antibiotics. This level
was higher than that obtained by Arvanitidou et al. (
7) in Greece
(58.1%) or by Seyfarth et al. (
50) in Denmark (9.2 to 11.1%)
but lower than that reported by Carraminana et al. (
14) in Spain
(100%). Class 1 integrons, the mobile elements that are known
for the efficient spread of antibiotic resistance genes due
to mobilization capabilities of gene cassettes (
24,
46,
57),
were detected in
E. coli and
Salmonella isolates. The finding
that only 13% of
Salmonella isolates contained class 1 integrons
suggests that most of the resistant
Salmonella isolates contained
resistance elements other than integrons. In contrast, integron-mediated
antibiotic resistance was common among
E. coli isolates, where
more than 50% of the isolates were shown to contain integrons,
with some containing two integrons. Various gene cassettes detected
in
Salmonella and
E. coli isolates in this study, including
aadA1,
aadA2,
aadA5,
aacA4,
dhfrXII,
dfrA1,
dhfrA17,
blaPSE1,
and
catB3, have been detected in clinical and nonclinical isolates
in reports from many countries (
6,
20,
29,
31,
32,
34,
35,
43,
49,
51,
52,
62,
64). The gene cassette array
aacA4-catB3-dfrA1,
which has been reported recently in Japan (
31) and China (
34),
was also detected in
E. coli isolates in this study, indicating
that this resistance cassette is widespread in Asia.
The transfer of conjugative plasmids is considered to be the most common mechanism for genetic exchange between bacteria, as plasmid conjugation can occur at high frequency and is capable of the cotransfer of several resistance genes, and transfer can occur both within bacterial species and between different species (13, 47). This study demonstrated that plasmids were widely distributed in E. coli and Salmonella isolates collected from food in Vietnam and that these isolates contained large conjugative plasmids which contained many antibiotic resistance determinants. The presence of large conjugative resistance plasmids has been detected in Salmonella and E. coli isolates from food and food-producing animals in many countries (8, 10, 23, 38, 63). High-molecular-weight plasmids are often attributed to virulence and antibiotic resistance (48). Therefore, the presence of the large plasmids in E. coli and Salmonella isolates detected in this study could have contributed to the spread of resistance genes. Using different combinations of donor and recipient strains, it has also been demonstrated that resistance markers can be readily transferred among the same and different species (e.g., Salmonella spp. and E. coli). These findings demonstrate the importance of plasmids in the dissemination of antibiotic resistance genes in enteric bacteria in Vietnamese food samples.
In summary, results confirm the role of raw food as a reservoir of antibiotic resistance bacteria that contained a pool of mobile genetic elements, which are ready to disseminate antibiotic resistance genes to other human pathogens and so constitute a problem for human health. The application of hygiene practices along the food chain and the prudent use of antibiotics in animal husbandry are therefore essential. To control further emergence of antibiotic resistance, studies with comprehensive collections of samples are urgently needed to increase our understanding of molecular genetic mechanisms involved in the dissemination of antibiotic resistance genes from food-borne pathogens to humans.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
We are grateful to Taghrid Istivan at RMIT University for her
continued advice and help for the project.
T.T.H.V was supported by the Atlantic Philanthropies Foundation and the School of Applied Sciences, RMIT University.

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: School of Applied Sciences, RMIT University, Building 3, Level 1, Room 2, City Campus, Melbourne, Victoria 3001, Australia. Phone: 61 3 9925 3691. Fax: 61 3 9925 3747. E-mail:
pcoloe{at}rmit.edu.au 
Published ahead of print on 19 October 2007. 

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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, December 2007, p. 7906-7911, Vol. 73, No. 24
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