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Découverte et optimisation d’inhibiteurs pour des enzymes DfrBs impliquées dans la résistance bactérienneToulouse, Jacynthe 05 1900 (has links)
No description available.
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Monitoring anti-infectives and antibiotic resistance genes : with focus on analytical method development, effects of antibiotics and national perspectivesKhan, Ghazanfar Ali January 2012 (has links)
Antibiotics are biologically active and are globally used in humans and animal medicine for treatment and in sub-therapeutic amounts as growth promoters in animal husbandry, aquaculture and agriculture. After excretion, inappropriate disposal and discharge from drug production facilities they enter into water bodies either as intact drugs, metabolites or transformed products. In water environments they promote development of antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs) which could serve as a reservoir and be horizontally transferred to human-associated bacteria and thus contribute to AR proliferation. Measurement of antibiotics has been revolutionized with the usage of solid phase extraction (SPE) for enrichment followed by Liquid chromatography mass spectrometry (LC-MS). On-line SPE coupled to LC-MS/MS has the advantages of high sample throughput, low sample preparation time and minimal solvent utilization. Constructed wetlands (CWs) are potential alternatives to conventional treatment plants to remove organic pollutants. A study at Plönninge, Halmstad was performed to assess the impact of bacterial community pattern and development of resistance in spiked (n=4) and control (n=4). CWs were spiked with antibiotics at environmentally relevant concentrations continuously for 25 days. Shannon Index (H’) were used to determine the bacterial diversity and real-time PCR detected and quantified antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs) sulI, tetA, tetB, erm, dfrA1, qnrS and vanB and class 1 integrons intI1. No significant differences in bacterial compositions or in ARGs or integron concentrations could be discerned between exposed and control wetlands. A study conducted in Northern Pakistan showed that the antibiotic levels in most studied rivers were comparable to surface water measurements in unpolluted sites in Europe and the US. However, high levels of antibiotics were detected in the river in close vicinity of the 10 million city Lahore, e.g. 4600 ng L−1 sulfamethoxazole. Highest detected levels were at one of the drug formulation facilities, with measured levels up to 49000 ng L−1 of sulfamethoxazole for example. The highest levels of ARGs detected, sul1 and dfrA1, were directly associated with the antibiotics detected at the highest concentrations, sulfamethoxazole and trimethoprim. In the study in UK, sewage epidemiology surveillance is used to measure the oseltamivir carboxylate (OC), metabolite of oseltamivir (parent drug) in twenty four time proportional hourly influent samples from two WWTPs and then back-calculations were made to assess the compliance of drug. Predicted users of oseltamivir, based on measured OC in waste water, ranged from 3-4 and 120-154 people for the two WWTP catchments, respectively, which are consistent with the projected use from national antiviral allocation statistics, 3-8 and 108-270, respectively. Scenario analysis suggests compliance was likely between 45-60% in the study regions.
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ANTIMICROBIAL RESISTANCE OF HUMAN CAMPYLOBACTER JEJUNI INFECTIONS FROM SASKATCHEWANOtto, Simon James Garfield 29 April 2011 (has links)
Saskatchewan is the only province in Canada to have routinely tested the antimicrobial susceptibility of all provincially reported human cases of campylobacteriosis. From 1999 to 2006, 1378 human Campylobacter species infections were tested for susceptibility at the Saskatchewan Disease Control Laboratory using the Canadian Integrated Program for Antimicrobial Resistance Surveillance panel and minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) breakpoints. Of these, 1200 were C. jejuni, 129 were C. coli, with the remaining made up of C. lari, C. laridis, C. upsaliensis and undifferentiated Campylobacter species. Campylobacter coli had significantly higher prevalences of ciprofloxacin resistance (CIPr), erythromycin resistance (ERYr), combined CIPr-ERYr resistance and multidrug resistance (to three or greater drug classes) than C. jejuni. Logistic regression models indicated that CIPr in C. jejuni decreased from 1999 to 2004 and subsequently increased in 2005 and 2006. The risk of CIPr was significantly increased in the winter months (January to March) compared to other seasons. A comparison of logistic regression and Cox proportional hazard survival models found that the latter were better able to detect significant temporal trends in CIPr and tetracycline resistance by directly modeling MICs, but that these trends were more difficult to interpret. Scan statistics detected significant spatial clusters of CIPr C. jejuni infections in urban centers (Saskatoon and Regina) and temporal clusters in the winter months; the space-time permutation model did not detect any space-time clusters. Bernoulli scan tests were computationally the fastest for cluster detection, compared to ordinal MIC and multinomial antibiogram models. eBURST analysis of antibiogram patterns showed a marked distinction between case and non-case isolates from the scan statistic clusters. Multilevel logistic regression models detected significant individual and regional contextual risk factors for infection with CIPr C. jejuni. Patients infected in the winter, that were between the ages of 40-45 years of age, that lived in urban regions and that lived in regions of moderately high poultry density had higher risks of a resistant infection. These results advance the epidemiologic knowledge of CIPr C. jejuni in Saskatchewan and provide novel analytical methods for antimicrobial resistance surveillance data in Canada. / Saskatchewan Disease Control Laboratory (Saskatchewan Ministry of Health); Laboratory for Foodborne Zoonoses (Public Health Agency of Canada); Centre for Foodborne, Environmental and Zoonotic Infectious Diseases (Public Health Agency of Canada); Ontario Veterinary College Blake Graham Fellowship
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Repeatability of the Adaptation of Pseudomonas fluorescens to Low GlucoseTeselkin, Oleksiy 30 April 2014 (has links)
Inspired by Gould, who claimed life would be arriving at a different outcome each time it were allowed to run from the same beginning, I have attempted to determine the repeatability of the adaptive course of one Pseudomonas fluorescens lineage. In addition, my study aimed to establish whether the likelihood of parallel evolution of the two synonymous single-nucleotide substitutions was contingent upon a prior motility-impairing deletion or a prior increase in fitness. Further, the study was designed to provide empirical data addressing the long-standing question of the effect of starting fitness on the ensuing rate of adaptation.
Although no exact replay of the initial evolutionary trajectory was observed, I have demonstrated that gtsB, but not gtsC gene, is likely to be a mutational hotspot under the low glucose with a recovery of two undescribed mutations in gtsB. My data are consistent with a notion that substitutions in gtsB may be contingent upon Δ35kB(fliJ-PFLU4466) motility-impairing deletion, but not the fitness increase associated with it.
Finally, the features of the adaptive landscape of P. fluorescens in the minimal glucose provide languid support for Fisher’s hypothesis of a decrease in adaptation rate with the rise in the starting fitness.
Taken together, these original results reinforce the non-negligible role of history in shaping the outcomes of biological evolution and call for caution in attempting a formulation of rigid predictive models of evolutionary change.
Inspiré par les travaux de Stephen J. Gould qui affirmait que la vie sur terre arriverait à une forme différente si elle repartait à zéro, je présente ici mes travaux où je teste la reproductibilité du cours adaptatif d’une lignée expérimentale de Pseudomonas fluorescens. L’objectif de cette étude était de déterminer si la probabilité que deux mutations synonymes évoluent en parallèle est affectée par la présence d’une délétion affectant la motilité de la bactérie ou de l’augmentation de la valeur sélective de celle-ci. De plus, le design expérimental de cette étude permet de tester si la valeur sélective initiale d’une population affecte le taux d’adaptation de cette même population.
Bien d’une reproductibilité exacte du cours adaptatif initial ne fut pas observée, je démontre que le gène gtsB est probablement un « hotspot »mutationnel permettant l’adaptation à de bas niveau de glucose, ayant trouvé deux mutations dans ce site; alors que le gène gtsC ne l’est pas. Mes données sont également conséquentes avec le fait que les mutation dans le gène gtsB dépendent de l’effet de la délétion Δ35kB(fliJ-PFLU4466) affectant la motilité de la bactérie, mais non de l’augmentation de la valeur sélective qui y est associée. Finalement, la forme du plateau adaptative associé à de bas niveaux de glucose chez P. fluorescens supporte l’hypothèse émise par Fisher qui stipule que le taux d’adaptation d’un organisme diminue avec la valeur sélective initiale qui y est associée.
L’ensemble de ces résultats supporte le rôle non-négligeable de l’histoire de vie d’une population en ce qui attrait à l’évolution future de cette même population. Aussi, ces résultats appelle à la prudence quand vient le temps de formuler des modèles prédictifs des changements évolutifs d’une population.
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Estudio de las comunidades microbianas de embutidos fermentados ligeramente acidificados mediante técnicas moleculares. Estandarización, seguridad y mejora tecnológica.Martín Juárez, Belén 22 April 2005 (has links)
Los embutidos fermentados ligeramente acidificados son un grupo de productos tradicionales mediterráneos, caracterizados por un pH superior a 5,3.Para un control eficiente de la seguridad microbiológica de los embutidos se necesitan técnicas rápidas para la identificación y recuento de los microorganismos patógenos a estudiar. En el presente trabajo, se desarrolló una técnica para la enumeración de L. monocytogenes que combinó el método del número más probable y la identificación mediante PCR específica. Para la detección de Salmonella spp. y L. monocytogenes se desarrolló un sistema de PCR-multiplex que permitió la identificación de ambos patógenos de forma simultánea en una sola reacción.El estudio de la calidad microbiológica de los embutidos fermentados ligeramente acidificados se completó con la caracterización de las comunidades microbianas más importantes en estos productos. Se identificaron a nivel de especie los aislados de bacterias del ácido láctico (BAL), de enterococos y de cocos gram-positivos catalasa-positivos (CGC+). Posteriormente se realizó una tipificación molecular de los mismos mediante RAPD y análisis del perfil plasmídico y se estudiaron las principales características de interés higiénico-sanitario y tecnológico de las cepas.Mediante PCR se identificó Lactobacillus sakei como la especie predominante (74%), seguida por Lactobacillus curvatus (21,2%). La actividad aminoácido-descarboxilasa se asoció a la especie L. curvatus (el 66% de los aislados presentaron esta actividad).La identificación de los enterococos se realizó mediante PCR-multiplex y por secuenciación del gen sodA. Enterococcus faecium fue la especie de enterococos predominante (51,9%) seguida por Enterococcus faecalis (14,2%).Todas las cepas de E. faecalis presentaron genes asociados a factores de virulencia. E. faecalis presentó mayor resistencia a antibióticos que el resto de las especies de enterococos estudiadas. Tan sólo una cepa de E. faecium presentó el genotipo vanA (que confiere resistencia de alto nivel a la vancomicina).La identificación de los aislados de CGC+ (mediante PCR específica y amplificación de la región intergénica 16S-23S ARNr) demostró que Staphylococcus xylosus es la especie predominante en los embutidos fermentados ligeramente acidificados (80,8%).La amina biógena más común en los CGC+ fue la feniletilamina, producida por un 10,8% de aislados. Un pequeño porcentaje de aislados fueron mecA+ (4,6%), presentando además resistencia a múltiples antibióticos. El potencial enterotoxigénico de las cepas de CGC+ fue muy reducido (3,3% de los aislados), detectándose únicamente el gen entC.El estudio pormenorizado de las comunidades bacterianas de interés permitió la selección de 2 cepas de L. sakei y 2 cepas de S. xylosus con características tecnológicas e higiénico-sanitarias óptimas. Para evaluar su efectividad como cultivos iniciadores se elaboraron dos tipos de embutidos ligeramente ácidos, chorizo y fuet, inoculados con microorganismos patógenos (Salmonella spp., L. monocytogenes y S. aureus). El uso de cultivos iniciadores permitió el control de L. monocytogenes, Enterobacteriaceae y Enterococcus así como del contenido en aminas biógenas. Los recuentos de Salmonella spp. disminuyeron de forma significante durante la maduración de los embutidos, independientemente del uso de cultivos iniciadores. El uso del tratamiento de alta presión (400 MPa) en los embutidos madurados consiguió la ausencia de Salmonella spp. en los lotes tratados. / Low-acid fermented meat products (final pH, 5.3 to 6.2) are a group of traditional Mediterranean products with a great diversity within the regions.To control the microbial quality of this kind of sausages is necessary to use rapid methods able to produce results quickly and reliably. In this study, a highly sensitive PCR-based method to detect and quantify L. monocytogenes in fermented sausages was developed. This method combined the high sensitivity of the most-probable-number method with a L. monocytogenes specific PCR assay. Also a multiplex-PCR based method for the simultaneous identification of L. monocytogenes and Salmonella spp. was designed. The study of the microbial quality of the slightly fermented sausages was followed by the characterization of the microbial communities of this kind of products. Lactic acid bacteria (LAB), enterococci and Gram-positive catalase-positive cocci (GCC+) were identified at species level. RAPD-PCR and plasmid profiling were used to evaluate the genetic diversity within species and to identify identical isolates of the same strain. Safety and hygienic properties were also studied in order to characterize the isolates in detail. With this aim, bacteriocin production, biogenic amine production and antibiotic susceptibility were determined. By species-specific PCR, Lactobacillus sakei was identified as the predominant LAB (74%) followed by Lactobacillus curvatus (21.2%) and Leuconostoc mesenteroides (4.8%). The production of biogenic amines was mainly related to the species L. curvatus (66% of the isolates were biogenic amine-producers).Species-specific PCR and partial sequencing of sodA gene were used to identify enterococcal population. Enterococcus faecium was the most frequently isolated species (51.9%) followed by Enterococcus faecalis (14,2%). All the E. faecalis strains carried virulence genes. E. faecalis showed higher antibiotic resistance than the other species. Only one E. faecium strain showed vanA genotype (high-level resistance to glycopeptides).Species-specific PCR and amplification of the 16S-23S rDNA intergenic region were used to identify GCC+ population. Staphylococcus xylosus was the predominant species (80.8%) in this kind of sausages.Tyramine was the most intense biogenic amine produced, although by only 4.6% of the GCC+ isolates. Phenylethylamine was more frequently detected (10.8% of isolates) but at lower levels. A low percentage of isolates (4.6%) showed mecA genes displaying also resistance to multiple antibiotics. Only 3.3% of isolates showed staphylococcal enterotoxins genes, all identified as entC gene.The study of the safety and technological properties of the isolates allowed to select 2 strains of L. sakei and 2 strains of S. xylosus on the basis of their technological and safety characteristics. To evaluate their suitability as starter cultures two types of low acid fermented sausages, fuet and chorizo, were manufactured. Batters were inoculated with L. monocytogenes, S. enterica and S. aureus. Starter cultures were able to control the growth of L. monocytogenes, Enterobacteriaceae, Enterococcus and the biogenic amine content. Salmonella spp counts decreased significantly during ripening independently of the use of starter culture and product.High hydrostatic pressure treatment was necessary to assure absence of Salmonella spp. in final products.
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Assessment of pathogenic bacteria and heavy metal pollution in sediment and water of Kahwa River, Bukavu, Democratic Republic of the CongoManegabe, Bahati Justin 02 1900 (has links)
Anthropogenic activities generate waste products that pollute the environment with bacteria and heavy metals. This research assessed pollution of the Kahwa River, Bukavu Town, DRC with cadmium and lead (HMs) and bacterial enteropathogens. A survey of businesses, households and healthcare facilities showed general use of the river to remove effluent and waste. Indicator organisms were cultured at over 200 cfu/100 ml showing faecal contamination of the river water. Antibiotic resistance was shown by enteropathogenic Vibrio cholerae and Salmonella typhi to ampicillin and cotrimoxazole with some sensitivity shown to ciprofloxacin. River water contained HMs at around 40 times the World Health Organisation limit for drinking water. The bacteria, particularly from river sediment, tolerated HMs up to a concentration of 1.5 mg/ml. The presence in the Kahwa River of antibiotic-resistant pathogens showing tolerance to HMs has serious public health implications / Environmental Management / M.Sc. (Environmental management)
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Antibiotic susceptibility and resistance in Neisseria meningitidis : phenotypic and genotypic characteristicsThulin Hedberg, Sara January 2009 (has links)
Neisseria meningitidis, also known as the meningococcus, is a globally spread obligate human bacterium causing meningitis and/or septicaemia. It is responsible for epidemics in both developed and developing countries. Untreated invasive meningococcal disease is often fatal, and despite modern intensive care units, the mortality is still remarkably high (approximately 10%). The continuously increasing antibiotic resistance in many bacterial pathogens is a serious public health threat worldwide and there have been numerous reports of emerging resistance in meningococci during the past decades. In paper I, the gene linked to reduced susceptibility to penicillins, the penA gene, was examined. The totally reported variation in all published penA genes was described. The penA gene was highly variable (in total 130 variants were identified). By examination of clinical meningococcal isolates, the association between penA gene sequences and penicillin susceptibility could be determined. Isolates with reduced susceptibility displayed mosaic structures in the penA gene. Two closely positioned nucleotide polymorphisms were identified in all isolates with reduced penicillin susceptibility and mosaic structured penA genes. These alterations were absent in all susceptible isolates and were successfully used to detect reduced penicillin susceptibility by real-time PCR and pyrosequencing in paper II. In papers III and IV, antibiotic susceptibility and characteristics of Swedish and African meningitis belt meningococcal isolates were comprehensively described. Although both populations were mainly susceptible to the antibiotics used for treatment and prophylaxis, the proportion of meningococci with reduced penicillin susceptibility was slightly higher in Sweden. A large proportion of the African isolates was resistant to tetracycline and erythromycin. In paper V, the gene linked to rifampicin resistance, the rpoB gene, was examined in meningococci from 12 mainly European countries. Alterations of three amino acids in the RpoB protein were found to always and directly lead to rifampicin resistance. A new breakpoint for rifampicin resistance in meningococci was suggested. The biological cost of the RpoB alterations was investigated in mice. The pathogenicity/virulence was significantly lower in rifampicin resistant mutants as compared with susceptible wild-type bacteria.
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Repeatability of the Adaptation of Pseudomonas fluorescens to Low GlucoseTeselkin, Oleksiy January 2014 (has links)
Inspired by Gould, who claimed life would be arriving at a different outcome each time it were allowed to run from the same beginning, I have attempted to determine the repeatability of the adaptive course of one Pseudomonas fluorescens lineage. In addition, my study aimed to establish whether the likelihood of parallel evolution of the two synonymous single-nucleotide substitutions was contingent upon a prior motility-impairing deletion or a prior increase in fitness. Further, the study was designed to provide empirical data addressing the long-standing question of the effect of starting fitness on the ensuing rate of adaptation.
Although no exact replay of the initial evolutionary trajectory was observed, I have demonstrated that gtsB, but not gtsC gene, is likely to be a mutational hotspot under the low glucose with a recovery of two undescribed mutations in gtsB. My data are consistent with a notion that substitutions in gtsB may be contingent upon Δ35kB(fliJ-PFLU4466) motility-impairing deletion, but not the fitness increase associated with it.
Finally, the features of the adaptive landscape of P. fluorescens in the minimal glucose provide languid support for Fisher’s hypothesis of a decrease in adaptation rate with the rise in the starting fitness.
Taken together, these original results reinforce the non-negligible role of history in shaping the outcomes of biological evolution and call for caution in attempting a formulation of rigid predictive models of evolutionary change.
Inspiré par les travaux de Stephen J. Gould qui affirmait que la vie sur terre arriverait à une forme différente si elle repartait à zéro, je présente ici mes travaux où je teste la reproductibilité du cours adaptatif d’une lignée expérimentale de Pseudomonas fluorescens. L’objectif de cette étude était de déterminer si la probabilité que deux mutations synonymes évoluent en parallèle est affectée par la présence d’une délétion affectant la motilité de la bactérie ou de l’augmentation de la valeur sélective de celle-ci. De plus, le design expérimental de cette étude permet de tester si la valeur sélective initiale d’une population affecte le taux d’adaptation de cette même population.
Bien d’une reproductibilité exacte du cours adaptatif initial ne fut pas observée, je démontre que le gène gtsB est probablement un « hotspot »mutationnel permettant l’adaptation à de bas niveau de glucose, ayant trouvé deux mutations dans ce site; alors que le gène gtsC ne l’est pas. Mes données sont également conséquentes avec le fait que les mutation dans le gène gtsB dépendent de l’effet de la délétion Δ35kB(fliJ-PFLU4466) affectant la motilité de la bactérie, mais non de l’augmentation de la valeur sélective qui y est associée. Finalement, la forme du plateau adaptative associé à de bas niveaux de glucose chez P. fluorescens supporte l’hypothèse émise par Fisher qui stipule que le taux d’adaptation d’un organisme diminue avec la valeur sélective initiale qui y est associée.
L’ensemble de ces résultats supporte le rôle non-négligeable de l’histoire de vie d’une population en ce qui attrait à l’évolution future de cette même population. Aussi, ces résultats appelle à la prudence quand vient le temps de formuler des modèles prédictifs des changements évolutifs d’une population.
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Pseudomonas Aeruginosa AmpR Transcriptional Regulatory NetworkBalasubramanian, Deepak 08 March 2013 (has links)
In Enterobacteriaceae, the transcriptional regulator AmpR, a member of the LysR family, regulates the expression of a chromosomal β-lactamase AmpC. The regulatory repertoire of AmpR is broader in Pseudomonas aeruginosa, an opportunistic pathogen responsible for numerous acute and chronic infections including cystic fibrosis. Previous studies showed that in addition to regulating ampC, P. aeruginosa AmpR regulates the sigma factor AlgT/U and production of some quorum sensing (QS)-regulated virulence factors. In order to better understand the ampR regulon, the transcriptional profiles generated using DNA microarrays and RNA-Seq of the prototypic P. aeruginosa PAO1 strain with its isogenic ampR deletion mutant, PAO∆ampR were analyzed. Transcriptome analysis demonstrates that the AmpR regulon is much more extensive than previously thought influencing the differential expression of over 500 genes. In addition to regulating resistance to β-lactam antibiotics via AmpC, AmpR also regulates non-β-lactam antibiotic resistance by modulating the MexEF-OprN efflux pump. Virulence mechanisms including biofilm formation, QS-regulated acute virulence, and diverse physiological processes such as oxidative stress response, heat-shock response and iron uptake are AmpR-regulated. Real-time PCR and phenotypic assays confirmed the transcriptome data. Further, Caenorhabditis elegans model demonstrates that a functional AmpR is required for full pathogenicity of P. aeruginosa. AmpR, a member of the core genome, also regulates genes in the regions of genome plasticity that are acquired by horizontal gene transfer. The extensive AmpR regulon included other transcriptional regulators and sigma factors, accounting for the extensive AmpR regulon. Gene expression studies demonstrate AmpR-dependent expression of the QS master regulator LasR that controls expression of many virulence factors. Using a chromosomally tagged AmpR, ChIP-Seq studies show direct AmpR binding to the lasR promoter. The data demonstrates that AmpR functions as a global regulator in P. aeruginosa and is a positive regulator of acute virulence while negatively regulating chronic infection phenotypes. In summary, my dissertation sheds light on the complex regulatory circuit in P. aeruginosa to provide a better understanding of the bacterial response to antibiotics and how the organism coordinately regulates a myriad of virulence factors.
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An assessment of water quality and occurrence of antibiotic-resistant bacteria in Naauwpoortspruit River, Mpumalanga province, South AfricaMudau, Khuthadzo Lunsford 03 1900 (has links)
Decreasing surface water quality in South Africa has become an issue of concern as the population grows, industrial and agricultural activities expand, and environmental pollution increases. Wastewater treatment plants and other anthropogenic activities are liable for releasing raw and inadequately treated effluents into the surface water. Extensive pollution accompanied by the use of disinfectants, pesticides, and other chemical pollutants has been attributed to increased antimicrobial resistance in bacteria such as Escherichia coli in surface
water, increasing environmental antibiotic resistance spread. The research aimed to determine water quality and prevalence of antibiotic-resistant bacteria in Naauwpoortspruit River, eMalahleni, Mpumalanga Province. Five sampling sites were selected along the Naauwpoortspruit River and monitoring was done for seven consecutive months. Samples were collected and analysed for physicochemical, microbiological parameters, and susceptibility profile of antibiotic-resistant bacteria using standard methods. Pearson
correlation analysis was used to assess the path and strength of the relationship between physicochemical and microbiological parameters in the study area.
Results of physicochemical and microbial parameters showed variation throughout the selected study sites. The results revealed a pH range of 4.45 – 7.9 and electrical conductivity levels range of 58.63 - 113.3 mS/m for the different sampling sites during the study period with lower levels detected during the winter period and higher levels in the summer period.
Also, water samples showed a high total dissolved solids levels range of 381.1 – 736.45 mg/L and biochemical oxygen demand range of 67.1 – 168 mg/L for the different sampling sites during the study period. The Naauwpoortspruit River had higher levels of ammonia of 33.4 mg/L at Point A during the winter period as compared to 15 mg/L in the summer period. Heavy metals results showed that mercury range of 0.01 – 0.065 mg/L and copper range of 0.001 – 0.0035 mg/L were not compliant with aquatic ecosystem guidelines at all selected sites
throughout the study period. The foremost finding of this study was that E. coli were present in all the selected sites at concentrations (>100 cfu/100ml). Elevated concentrations of 5.4 x 103 and 4.2 x 103 cfu/100ml for the total and faecal indicator bacteria were detected from sites downstream to 2.2 x103 and 2.35 x103 cfu/100ml for sites upstream river, in the rainy months.
During the dry season, total coliforms, and faecal coliforms concentration of 0.4 x103 to 0.65 x 103 cfu/100ml were detected downstream and 0.25 x 103 and 0.5 x 103 cfu/100ml from
upstream, respectively. The physicochemical and microbiological parameters measured at selected sites exceeded acceptable limits and proved unsuitable for applications such as full and intermediate recreational activities, and aquatic ecosystems. The variation in
physicochemical parameters results was influenced by both natural processes and human activities such as salinity and Acid Mine Drainage (AMD) within the Naauwpoortspruit River.
Using the Kirby-Bauer disc diffusion method, E. coli and faecal coliforms were tested for resistance to antibiotics; ampicillin (10 μg/ml), kanamycin (30 μg), streptomycin (30 μg), chloramphenicol (30 μg), erythromycin (15 μg), ox tetracycline (30 μg), erythromycin (15
μg/ml) and norfloxacin (10 μg). More than 60% of faecal coliform were resistant to at least four of the tested antibiotics and between 60 - 80% of the E. coli isolates were resistant to β lactam. The highest microbial antibiotic resistance (MAR) index value was observed at Site D
(0.38 for E. coli) which showed multi-antibiotic resistance. Site D is characterized by wastewater treatment, power generation industries, and agriculture activities. The highest level of MAR observed at Site D indicates the need to control extensive pollution and constantly monitor the changing trends in antimicrobial resistance patterns of these
waterborne pathogens. Statistical analysis showed that the development of microbiological parameters loads has a strong correlation with physicochemical parameters due to the association of sampling sites in the river environment. This study shows that the aquatic ecosystem needs constant monitoring to establish their conditions, impacts of pollution activities within the catchment, and input information into sustainable management of the water resources. / Environmental Sciences / M. Sc. (Environmental Science)
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