Plasmid characterization in bacterial isolates of public health relevance in a tertiary healthcare facility in Kilimanjaro, Tanzania

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Abstract

Plasmids are infectious double stranded DNA molecules that are found within bacteria. Horizontal gene transfer promotes successful spread of different types of plasmids within or among bacteria species, making their detection an important task for guiding clinical treatment. We used whole genome sequenced data to determine the prevalence of plasmid replicons in clinical bacterial isolates, the presence of resistance and virulence genes in plasmids, and the relationship between resistance and virulence genes within each plasmid. All bacterial sequences were de novo assembled using Unicycler before extraction of plasmids. Assembly graphs were submitted to Gplas+plasflow for plasmid prediction. The predicted plasmid components were validated using PlasmidFinder.

A total of 159 (56.2%) out of 283 bacterial isolates were found to carry plasmids, with E. coli, K. pneumoniae and S. aureus being the most prevalent plasmid carriers. A total of 27 (87.1%) combined plasmids were found to carry both resistance and virulence genes compared to 4 (12.9%) single plasmids. No statistically significant correlation was found between the number of antimicrobial resistance and virulence genes in plasmids (r =-0.25, p > 0.05). Our findings show a relatively high proportion of plasmid-carrying isolates suggesting selection pressure due to antibiotic use in the hospital. Co-occurrence of antibiotic resistance and virulence genes in clinical isolates is a public health relevant problem needing attention.

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