본문

서브메뉴

상세정보

The role of excreted antibiotics in the establishment of persistent on-farm reservoirs of antibiotic-resistant bacteria- [electronic resource]
The role of excreted antibiotics in the establishment of persistent on-farm reservoirs of ...
The role of excreted antibiotics in the establishment of persistent on-farm reservoirs of antibiotic-resistant bacteria- [electronic resource]

상세정보

자료유형  
 학위논문(국외)
자관 청구기호  
기본표목-개인명  
표제와 책임표시사항  
The role of excreted antibiotics in the establishment of persistent on-farm reservoirs of antibiotic-resistant bacteria - [electronic resource] / Liu, Jinxin.
발행, 배포, 간사 사항  
발행, 배포, 간사 사항  
Ann Arbor : ProQuest Dissertations & Theses , 2016
    형태사항  
    1 online resource(103 p)
    일반주기  
    Source: Dissertation Abstracts International, Volume: 78-04(E), Section: B.
    일반주기  
    Adviser: Douglas R. Call.
    학위논문주기  
    Thesis (Ph.D.)--Washington State University, 2016.
    요약 등 주기  
    요약Bioavailable antibiotic residues from treated animals likely contribute to the persistence of antibiotic-resistant bacteria in agricultural systems. To determine the magnitude of this effect, we evaluated changes in the number of antibiotic-resistant E. coli in the soil of calf pens after administration of therapeutic course of antibiotics. Antibiotic treatment resulted in a ~3-log (ceftiofur) and ~5-log (florfenicol) increase in the number of antibiotic-resistant E. coli in the pen soil and these resulting "reservoirs" remained stable for at least 20 days. To determine is antibiotic residues or fecal shedding of resistant bacteria is more important in this process, treated and untreated calves were introduced into pens that had been pre-sprayed with a GFP-labeled strain of E. coli. Results demonstrated that antibiotic residues were responsible for a 10-fold greater effect than fecal loading. We also estimated the "infectious dose 50" (ID50 = 2.83 log/g) for antibiotic-resistant E. coli within the first ten days of exposure (Chapter I). To determine if reservoirs of this magnitude exist under "real-world" conditions, we examined the density of soil-borne, antibiotic-resistant E. coli on 14 working farms in Washington State. A high proportion of soil samples from calf and heifer pens (32-61%) exceeded the predicted contact-dependent ID50 for transmission of antibiotic-resistant E. coli from soil to calves. Hospital pens (25-36%) also regularly exceeded this threshold, but this was much less common in lactating (1.5-3%), fresh (2-17%) and dry lot soils (0.8-6%). A one-year longitudinal study indicated that the abundance of antibiotic-resistant E. coli in soil is positively correlated with monthly average high and low temperature (r =0.58 to 0.7, P = 0.04 to 0.01). In a separate 16s-rDNA study, we observed a transient (10 days) microbiome change in the feces of animals after antibiotic treatment (P 0.05). Although pen soil community structure changed over time, if there were any antibiotic treatment effects these were masked by other factors (Chapter II). The presence of discrete and robust reservoirs of antibiotic-resistant E. coli in predictable locations presents a new opportunity for mitigating and reducing antibiotic resistance in food-animal production environments.
    주제명부출표목-일반주제명  
    주제명부출표목-일반주제명  
    주제명부출표목-일반주제명  
    주제명부출표목-일반주제명  
    부출표목-단체명  
    Washington State University Immunology and Infectious Diseases
      기본자료저록  
      Dissertation Abstracts International. 78-04B(E).
      기본자료저록  
      Dissertation Abstract International
      전자적 위치 및 접속  
       원문정보보기
      소장사항  
      20180515 2018

      MARC

       008180601s2016        us          esm        001c    eng
      ■001MOKWON01256797
      ■00520180518092455
      ■007cr
      ■020    ▼a9781369186390
      ■035    ▼a(MiAaPQ)AAI10163998
      ■035    ▼a(MiAaPQ)wsu:11798
      ■040    ▼aMiAaPQ▼cMiAaPQ
      ■090    ▼a전자도서(박사논문)
      ■1001  ▼aLiu,  Jinxin.
      ■24514▼aThe  role  of  excreted  antibiotics  in  the  establishment  of  persistent  on-farm  reservoirs  of  antibiotic-resistant  bacteria▼h[electronic  resource]▼cLiu,  Jinxin.
      ■260    ▼a[Sl]▼bWashington  State  University▼c2016
      ■260  1▼aAnn  Arbor▼bProQuest  Dissertations  &  Theses▼c2016
      ■300    ▼a1  online  resource(103  p)
      ■500    ▼aSource:  Dissertation  Abstracts  International,  Volume:  78-04(E),  Section:  B.
      ■500    ▼aAdviser:  Douglas  R.  Call.
      ■5021  ▼aThesis  (Ph.D.)--Washington  State  University,  2016.
      ■520    ▼aBioavailable  antibiotic  residues  from  treated  animals  likely  contribute  to  the  persistence  of  antibiotic-resistant  bacteria  in  agricultural  systems.  To  determine  the  magnitude  of  this  effect,  we  evaluated  changes  in  the  number  of  antibiotic-resistant  E.  coli  in  the  soil  of  calf  pens  after  administration  of  therapeutic  course  of  antibiotics.  Antibiotic  treatment  resulted  in  a  ~3-log  (ceftiofur)  and  ~5-log  (florfenicol)  increase  in  the  number  of  antibiotic-resistant  E.  coli  in  the  pen  soil  and  these  resulting  "reservoirs"  remained  stable  for  at  least  20  days.  To  determine  is  antibiotic  residues  or  fecal  shedding  of  resistant  bacteria  is  more  important  in  this  process,  treated  and  untreated  calves  were  introduced  into  pens  that  had  been  pre-sprayed  with  a  GFP-labeled  strain  of  E.  coli.  Results  demonstrated  that  antibiotic  residues  were  responsible  for  a  10-fold  greater  effect  than  fecal  loading.  We  also  estimated  the  "infectious  dose  50"  (ID50  =  2.83  log/g)  for  antibiotic-resistant  E.  coli  within  the  first  ten  days  of  exposure  (Chapter  I).  To  determine  if  reservoirs  of  this  magnitude  exist  under  "real-world"  conditions,  we  examined  the  density  of  soil-borne,  antibiotic-resistant  E.  coli  on  14  working  farms  in  Washington  State.  A  high  proportion  of  soil  samples  from  calf  and  heifer  pens  (32-61%)  exceeded  the  predicted  contact-dependent  ID50  for  transmission  of  antibiotic-resistant  E.  coli  from  soil  to  calves.  Hospital  pens  (25-36%)  also  regularly  exceeded  this  threshold,  but  this  was  much  less  common  in  lactating  (1.5-3%),  fresh  (2-17%)  and  dry  lot  soils  (0.8-6%).  A  one-year  longitudinal  study  indicated  that  the  abundance  of  antibiotic-resistant  E.  coli  in  soil  is  positively  correlated  with  monthly  average  high  and  low  temperature  (r  =0.58  to  0.7,  P  =  0.04  to  0.01).  In  a  separate  16s-rDNA  study,  we  observed  a  transient  (10  days)  microbiome  change  in  the  feces  of  animals  after  antibiotic  treatment  (P  0.05).  Although  pen  soil  community  structure  changed  over  time,  if  there  were  any  antibiotic  treatment  effects  these  were  masked  by  other  factors  (Chapter  II).  The  presence  of  discrete  and  robust  reservoirs  of  antibiotic-resistant  E.  coli  in  predictable  locations  presents  a  new  opportunity  for  mitigating  and  reducing  antibiotic  resistance  in  food-animal  production  environments.
      ■590    ▼aSchool  code:  0251.
      ■650  4▼aMicrobiology
      ■650  4▼aBioinformatics
      ■650  4▼aEnvironmental  science
      ■650  4▼aSoil  sciences
      ■690    ▼a0410
      ■690    ▼a0715
      ■690    ▼a0768
      ■690    ▼a0481
      ■71020▼aWashington  State  University▼bImmunology  and  Infectious  Diseases.
      ■7730  ▼tDissertation  Abstracts  International▼g78-04B(E).
      ■773    ▼tDissertation  Abstract  International
      ■790    ▼a0251
      ■791    ▼aPh.D.
      ■792    ▼a2016
      ■793    ▼aEnglish
      ■85640▼uhttp://www.riss.kr/pdu/ddodLink.do?id=T14819781▼nKERIS▼z이  자료의  원문은  한국교육학술정보원에서  제공합니다.
      ■980    ▼a20180515▼f2018

      미리보기

      내보내기

      chatGPT토론

      Ai 추천 관련 도서


        신착도서 더보기
        관련도서 더보기
        최근 3년간 통계입니다.
        SMS 발송 간략정보 이동 상세정보출력

        소장정보

        • 예약
        • 서가에 없는 책 신고
        • 자료배달서비스
        • 나의폴더
        • 우선정리요청
        소장자료
        등록번호 청구기호 소장처 대출가능여부 대출정보
        EM092551 TD  전자도서(박사논문) 연속간행물실(2층) 온라인이용가능 온라인이용가능
        마이폴더

        * 대출중인 자료에 한하여 예약이 가능합니다. 예약을 원하시면 예약버튼을 클릭하십시오.

        해당 도서를 다른 이용자가 함께 대출한 도서

        관련도서

        관련 인기도서

        서평쓰기

        도서위치