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  • Title: Population structure and antimicrobial susceptibility of Mycoplasma ovipneumoniae isolates in France.
    Author: Jaÿ M, Ambroset C, Tricot A, Colin A, Tardy F.
    Journal: Vet Microbiol; 2020 Sep; 248():108828. PubMed ID: 32905961.
    Abstract:
    Chronic non-progressive pneumonia in small ruminants caused by Mycoplasma (M.) ovipneumoniae is mainly controlled by chemotherapy. In France, during the last decade, a rise in M. ovipneumoniae cases was recorded in both sheep and goats, suggesting a possible emergence. Whether this rise is associated with antimicrobial resistance, as observed in other ruminant Mycoplasma species, has yet to be examined. The aim of the study was to characterize the diversity of M. ovipneumoniae strains circulating in France and assess their antimicrobial resistance, together with the underlying mechanisms, to help find an explanation for the increase in reported cases. The genetic diversity of 56 strains isolated between 2007 and 2018 from sheep and goats was assessed using different subtyping methods. Their susceptibility to six antimicrobial classes was profiled by estimating Minimum Inhibitory Concentrations (MICs) using an optimised agar dilution method. Resistance mechanisms were explored by sequence analysis of rRNA targets. A high genetic diversity of strains was evidenced, with consistent, marked animal-host clustering in the Hsp70 gene and whole genome sequence phylogeny. No clonal evolution could thus account for putative emergence. Apart from florfenicol, MICs were low except for a few isolates with increased values for tetracyclines, macrolides and lincosamides. Hotspot mutations in the target ribosomal gene could explain increased tetracycline MICs. Other mechanisms are suspected for macrolide-lincosamide and florfenicol resistance. The emergence of M. ovipneumoniae is thus not related to any increase in resistance or to a clonal spread. Explanations may lie in breeding practices.
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