BYLINE: Matt Davenport

Highlights:

  • Research from Michigan State University has shown that more than 100 strains of Campylobacter jejuni, a leading cause of foodborne illness, circulating in Michigan are resistant to at least one antibiotic.

  • Working with the Michigan Department of Health and Human Services, the MSU team isolated the strains from patients in Michigan hospitals and analyzed the bacteria with next-generation genetic sequencing tools.

  • The team reported its findings in the journal Microbial Genomics.

  • They identified a high frequency of antibiotic resistance genes within C. jejuni genomes and demonstrated that most strains were associated with chicken or cattle sources.

  • The high prevalence of antibiotic resistance genes is concerning, as these genes can be readily transferred to other bacteria in the gut during infections or in animal reservoirs where the bacteria thrive, creating more resistant pathogens.

  • The research also highlights straightforward opportunities to reduce the number of infections and slow the spread of those genes, such as handwashing and avoiding cross-contamination while cooking beef and poultry products, the team said. 

Newswise — EAST LANSING, Mich. Working with the Michigan Department of Health and Human Services, Michigan State University researchers have shown that antibiotic resistance genes are prevalent in the bacterium Campylobacter jejuni, a leading cause of foodborne illness.

The team found that more than half of the C. jejuni, isolated from patients in Michigan, are genetically protected against at least one antibiotic used to fight bacterial infections. The team’s full report is published in the journal Microbial Genomics.

“We know these pathogens have been around forever, but using more sophisticated genome sequencing tools lets us look at them differently,” said Shannon Manning, the project’s leader and an MSU Research Foundation Professor in the Department of Microbiology and Molecular Genetics. “We found that the genomes are extremely diverse and contain a lot of genes that can protect them from numerous antibiotics.” 

The team’s report provides valuable technical insights to epidemiologists, health care workers and other specialists, but Manning also emphasized what the team’s findings mean for the average person. 

Although most otherwise healthy adults can fight off such stomach bugs without antibiotics, she said, there are people for whom C. jejuni presents a serious concern.  Infections can lead to hospitalization, autoimmune and neurological complications, long-term disability and even death.

Understanding the extent of antibiotic resistance in this species, as well as which antibiotics different strains are resistant to, can help put patients on better treatment plans sooner.

“If we know the type of antibiotic resistance genes that Campylobacter has, then we know which antibiotics not to give a patient,” Manning said. This can lead to better patient outcomes and shorter hospital stays.

The finding also has broader implications. After people fight off an infection and the pathogen is killed — with or without antibiotics — its genes can linger, including those that provide antibiotic resistance. Other microbes can then pick up those genes, integrate them into their own genomes and gain resistance.

“That’s really important. Foodborne pathogens are ubiquitous. They are found in the foods we eat but also in animals and environments that we come into contact with regularly,” Manning said. “If they carry resistance genes, then not only can they make us sick, but they can also easily transfer the genes to other bacteria.”

This underscores the importance of food hygiene and safety, Manning said, including avoiding cross-contamination of other foods and surfaces before cooking.

The team’s genetic analysis also let the researchers pinpoint the host, or source, of specific strains. That is, they could predict whether the bacteria originated from specific animals or were generalists that are commonly found in multiple hosts. 

“When we did this genomic analysis, we found that most patients in Michigan were infected with strains linked to chicken or cattle hosts,” Manning said. Infections also were more likely to occur in rural areas, the team found, suggesting that exposure to these animals and their environments could be important to monitor and potentially control.

Focusing on Michigan and working with hospitals around the state enabled the researchers to reveal more granular and local insights as well. Studying the 214 strains recovered from real patients, the researchers observed trends specific to Michigan that may otherwise have gone unnoticed.

Although the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention operates a nationwide network surveilling foodborne pathogens, many states, including Michigan, are not part of this system. 

“We have unique ecological and agricultural factors in Michigan that may impact how these pathogens survive and proliferate in certain hosts and environments,” said Manning, whose team also studies other major contributors to foodborne illness, including E. coli, shigella and salmonella.

“If you don’t look for them and assess, then you won’t be able to identify which factors are most important for infections and antibiotic resistance or define how Michigan differs from other regions,” she said.

That assessment is, in part, the goal of the Michigan Sequencing Academic Partnership for Public Health Innovation and Response, or MI-SAPPHIRE, a grant that MDHHS awarded Manning’s team last year. The MI-SAPPHIRE program is also supported by the CDC. 

This grant was crucial for pushing the project over the finish line, Manning said, although the team has been working on it for years through the Enterics Research Investigational Network supported by the National Institutes of Health. Jose Rodrigues, the report’s first author, completed the research as part of his doctorate, which he earned from the College of Natural Science in 2022.

Other researchers who worked on the project in Manning’s group at MSU include Wonhee Cha, Sanjana Mukherjee, Rebekah Sloup and Heather Blankenship, who is now the Genomics Section Manager at MDHHS. The work was performed in collaboration with Marty Soehnlen and James Rudrik of the MDHHS. 

By Matt Davenport

Read on MSUToday. 

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Journal Link: Microbial Genomics