Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Dairy Farmin a Region of Northeast Brazil: Genetic Diversity, Resistome, and Virulome.
- Journal:
- Pathogens (Basel, Switzerland)
- Year:
- 2026
- Authors:
- Perez, Vinicius Pietta et al.
- Affiliation:
- Departamento de Microbiologia · Brazil
Abstract
is a major cause of bovine mastitis, which affects the quality and yield of milk. The main strategy for controlling this pathogen on dairy farms is the use of antibiotics. This study investigated the clonality, serotype distribution, antimicrobial susceptibility, and presence of resistance and virulence genes in 46isolates obtained from raw bovine milk in northeastern Brazil. Capsular types were determined using multiplex PCR and antibiotic susceptibility profiles were determined using disc diffusion or the gradient strip method. Clonal diversity was evaluated via pulsed-field gel electrophoresis. Eight isolates were sequenced using short- and long-read methods. There was high overall genetic diversity, whereas the resistance and virulence profiles were largely homogeneous within herds. Tetracycline and macrolide resistance was frequent and mediated byandand less frequently by. Genome analysis demonstrated that resistance genes are present in mobile genetic elements that are also present in human isolates, and phylogenomic analyses identified ST-103 as the predominant and multi-host-adapted lineage, whereas ST-91 clustered with the bovine-adapted lineage. These findings expand the molecular epidemiology ofin dairy farms of a region in northeast Brazil and highlight the importance of surveillance strategies for guiding mastitis control and mitigating the spread of antimicrobial resistance.
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Search related cases →Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/41754381/