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Study Design

Type
Observational
Population
Duplicate piglet nasal swabs from three European countries (Germany, Ireland and The Netherlands) were taken longitudinally from birth up to 10 weeks
Methods
Duplicate piglet nasal swabs were taken longitudinally from birth up to 10 weeks, one for amplicon sequencing and qPCR, and the other was cryopreserved for culturing; potential probiotic species were identified by anticorrelation analysis, followed by culture, MALDI-TOF and 16S rRNA gene sequencing, screening for tetracycline resistance and hemolytic activity, whole genome sequencing, and in vitro challenge using spent medium
  • Animal Study

Background

Considering global antimicrobial resistance (AMR) prevalence, alternative or complementary strategies to antimicrobial use, are of interest. Livestock- associated methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (LA-MRSA) is of particular interest as despite significant AMU reduction, LA-MRSA prevalence in pig husbandry has not decreased. To develop such strategy, we performed targeted isolation of bacterial species with potential antagonism against LA-MRSA in pig farms.

Results

Duplicate piglet nasal swabs from three European countries (Germany, Ireland and The Netherlands) were taken longitudinally from birth up to 10 weeks, one for amplicon sequencing and qPCR, and the other was cryopreserved for culturing. We identified potential probiotic species by anticorrelation analysis of bacterial abundance from amplicon sequencing data with quantitative S. aureus estimates from qPCR data from the samples. A literature-screen was performed on the species identified, to determine their probiotic potential. Following this, 1302 isolates were grown from selected cryopreserved swabs and identified using MALDI-TOF and additional 16S rRNA gene sequencing to isolate the anticorrelating species. Ninety-five isolates of interest were screened for absence of tetracycline resistance and hemolytic activity and whole genome sequencing was conducted to verify their taxonomy and to assess their AMR and virulence gene profile. Additional phenotypic antimicrobial resistance testing selected three different Lactococcus lactis strains. During an in vitro challenge using spent medium, all three strains demonstrated inhibition against two S. aureus strains.

Conclusions

Our study, using an anticorrelation based targeted approach, identified three L. lactis strains with weak negative correlation with S. aureus, suitable for in vivo safety and efficacy testing in pigs. These L. lactis strains may have the ability to be used safely to reduce LA-MRSA carriage in the nasal passages of pigs but further in vivo testing is necessary to confirm this potential.

Research Insights

SupplementDoseHealth OutcomeEffect TypeEffect SizeSource
Lactobacillus amylovorusReduced Staphylococcus aureus CarriageBeneficial
Small
View source

These L. lactis strains may have the ability to be used safely to reduce LA-MRSA carriage in the nasal passages of pigs but further in vivo testing is necessary to confirm this potential.

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