动物饲料中的锌和铜——动物源性细菌对抗菌剂的耐药性和共耐药性的发展。

Microbial Ecology in Health and Disease Pub Date : 2014-09-26 eCollection Date: 2014-01-01 DOI:10.3402/mehd.v25.25862
Siamak Yazdankhah, Knut Rudi, Aksel Bernhoft
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引用次数: 183

摘要

由于在配合饲料中添加元素以及药物治疗,猪和家禽等养殖动物在其日粮中获得了额外的锌和铜。养殖动物的肠道细菌已显示出对锌和铜等微量元素产生耐药性。对锌的耐药性通常与葡萄球菌对甲氧西林的耐药性有关,在动物饲料中添加锌可能会增加肠道中多重耐药大肠杆菌的比例。细菌(特别是肠球菌)对铜的耐药性通常与对大环内酯类和糖肽(如万古霉素)等抗菌药物的耐药性有关。这种耐药细菌可能从生产食品的动物转移到人类(农民、兽医和消费者)。缺乏Zn/Cu暴露与电阻的剂量-反应关系数据;然而,与基础暴露水平相比,高微量元素暴露似乎更有可能产生电阻驱动效应。也缺乏数据可以证明耐锌/铜细菌是否可能获得抗生素耐药基因/成为抗生素耐药,或者抗生素耐药细菌是否比抗生素敏感细菌更有能力成为锌/铜耐药。需要进一步研究Zn/Cu与细菌抗生素耐药性之间的联系。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Zinc and copper in animal feed - development of resistance and co-resistance to antimicrobial agents in bacteria of animal origin.

Farmed animals such as pig and poultry receive additional Zn and Cu in their diets due to supplementing elements in compound feed as well as medical remedies. Enteral bacteria in farmed animals are shown to develop resistance to trace elements such as Zn and Cu. Resistance to Zn is often linked with resistance to methicillin in staphylococci, and Zn supplementation to animal feed may increase the proportion of multiresistant E. coli in the gut. Resistance to Cu in bacteria, in particular enterococci, is often associated with resistance to antimicrobial drugs like macrolides and glycopeptides (e.g. vancomycin). Such resistant bacteria may be transferred from the food-producing animals to humans (farmers, veterinarians, and consumers). Data on dose-response relation for Zn/Cu exposure and resistance are lacking; however, it seems more likely that a resistance-driven effect occurs at high trace element exposure than at more basal exposure levels. There is also lack of data which could demonstrate whether Zn/Cu-resistant bacteria may acquire antibiotic resistance genes/become antibiotics resistant, or if antibiotics-resistant bacteria are more capable to become Zn/Cu resistant than antibiotics-susceptible bacteria. Further research is needed to elucidate the link between Zn/Cu and antibiotic resistance in bacteria.

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