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Antibiotic resistance pattern of the allochthonous bacteria isolated from commercially available spices

Éva György, Éva Laslo, M Antal, Csaba András

2021Food Science & Nutrition32 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Spices are often used in dried form, sometimes with significant microbial contamination including pathogenic and food spoilage bacteria. The antibiotic resistance represents an additional risk for food industry, and it is worthy of special attention as spices are important food additives. During our work, we examined the microbiological quality of 50 different spices with cultivation methods on diverse selective media. The identification of the most representative bacteria was carried out using 16S rDNA gene sequence analysis. Antibiotic resistance profiling of twelve identified Bacillus species ( B. subtilis subsp. stercoris BCFK, B. licheniformis BCLS, B. siamensis SZBC, B. zhangzhouensis BCTA, B. altitudinis SALKÖ, B. velezensis CVBC, B. cereus SALÖB isolate, B. tequilensis KOPS, B. filamentosus BMBC, B. subtilis subsp. subtilis PRBC2, B. safensis BMPS, and B. mojavensis BCFK2 isolate) was performed using the standard disk‐diffusion method against 32 antibiotics. The study showed that the majority resistance was obtained against penicillin G (100%), oxacillin (91.67%), amoxyclav (91.67%), rifampicin (75%), and azithromycin (75%). Our findings suggest that spices harbor multidrug‐resistant bacteria.

Topics & Concepts

BiologyCereusMicrobiologyAntibiotic resistancePenicillinPathogenic bacteriaAntibioticsBacteriaBacillus cereusBacillus subtilisRifampicinFood scienceGeneticsAntibiotic Resistance in BacteriaIdentification and Quantification in FoodBacterial biofilms and quorum sensing
Antibiotic resistance pattern of the allochthonous bacteria isolated from commercially available spices | Litcius