Escherichia coli in urban marine sediments: interpreting virulence, biofilm formation, halotolerance, and antibiotic resistance to infer contamination or naturalization
Journal article, 2024

Marine sediments have been suggested as a reservoir for pathogenic bacteria, including Escherichia coli. The origins, and properties promoting survival of E. coli in marine sediments (including osmotolerance, biofilm formation capacity, and antibiotic resistance), have not been well-characterized. Phenotypes and genotypes of 37 E. coli isolates from coastal marine sediments were characterized. The isolates were diverse: 30 sequence types were identified that have been previously documented in humans, livestock, and other animals. Virulence genes were found in all isolates, with more virulence genes found in isolates sampled from sediment closer to the effluent discharge point of a wastewater treatment plant. Antibiotic resistance was demonstrated phenotypically for one isolate, which also carried tetracycline resistance genes on a plasmid. Biofilm formation capacity varied for the different isolates, with most biofilm formed by phylogroup B1 isolates. All isolates were halotolerant, growing at 3.5% NaCl. This suggests that the properties of some isolates may facilitate survival in marine environments and can explain in part how marine sediments can be a reservoir for pathogenic E. coli. As disturbance of sediment could resuspend bacteria, this should be considered as a potential contributor to compromised bathing water quality at nearby beaches.

biofim

environmental Escherichia coli

antibiotic resistance

whole genome sequencing

halotolerance

bathing water

Author

Isabel K. Erb

Lund University

Ideon Science Park

Carolina Suarez

Lund University

Ellinor M. Frank

Ideon Science Park

Lund University

Johan Bengtsson Palme

University of Gothenburg

Chalmers, Life Sciences, Systems and Synthetic Biology

Elisabet Lindberg

City of Helsingborg

Catherine Paul

Lund University

FEMS Microbes

26336685 (eISSN)

Vol. 5 xtae024

EMBARK: Establishing a Monitoring Baseline for Antibiotic Resistance in Key environments

Swedish Research Council (VR) (2019-00299), 2022-05-01 -- 2023-12-31.

Predicting future pathogenicity and antibiotic resistance

Swedish Foundation for Strategic Research (SSF) (FFL21-0174), 2022-08-01 -- 2027-12-31.

Subject Categories

Microbiology

Microbiology in the medical area

DOI

10.1093/femsmc/xtae024

More information

Latest update

9/23/2024