Cartography of opportunistic pathogens and antibiotic resistance genes in a tertiary hospital environment
Research output: Journal Publications and Reviews › RGC 21 - Publication in refereed journal › peer-review
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Detail(s)
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 941–951 |
Journal / Publication | Nature Medicine |
Volume | 26 |
Online published | 8 Jun 2020 |
Publication status | Published - Jun 2020 |
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DOI | DOI |
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Link to Scopus | https://www.scopus.com/record/display.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85086157299&origin=recordpage |
Permanent Link | https://scholars.cityu.edu.hk/en/publications/publication(3cde77a2-24e3-4616-99ee-a6b87ac15840).html |
Abstract
Although disinfection is key to infection control, the colonization patterns and resistomes of hospital-environment microbes remain underexplored. We report the first extensive genomic characterization of microbiomes, pathogens and antibiotic resistance cassettes in a tertiary-care hospital, from repeated sampling (up to 1.5 years apart) of 179 sites associated with 45 beds. Deep shotgun metagenomics unveiled distinct ecological niches of microbes and antibiotic resistance genes characterized by biofilm-forming and human-microbiome-influenced environments with corresponding patterns of spatiotemporal divergence. Quasi-metagenomics with nanopore sequencing provided thousands of high-contiguity genomes, phage and plasmid sequences (>60% novel), enabling characterization of resistome and mobilome diversity and dynamic architectures in hospital environments. Phylogenetics identified multidrug-resistant strains as being widely distributed and stably colonizing across sites. Comparisons with clinical isolates indicated that such microbes can persist in hospitals for extended periods (>8 years), to opportunistically infect patients. These findings highlight the importance of characterizing antibiotic resistance reservoirs in hospitals and establish the feasibility of systematic surveys to target resources for preventing infections.
Research Area(s)
- INTENSIVE-CARE-UNIT, STAPHYLOCOCCUS-AUREUS, ACQUIRED INFECTION, TRANSMISSION, PREVENTION, SURFACES, GENOMES, CLUSTER
Bibliographic Note
Full text of this publication does not contain sufficient affiliation information. With consent from the author(s) concerned, the Research Unit(s) information for this record is based on the existing academic department affiliation of the author(s).
Citation Format(s)
Cartography of opportunistic pathogens and antibiotic resistance genes in a tertiary hospital environment. / 109 authors, including; Nagarajan, Niranjan.
In: Nature Medicine, Vol. 26, 06.2020, p. 941–951.
In: Nature Medicine, Vol. 26, 06.2020, p. 941–951.
Research output: Journal Publications and Reviews › RGC 21 - Publication in refereed journal › peer-review
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