Phage types, antibiotic susceptibilities and plasmid profiles of Salmonella typhimurium and Salmonella enteritidis strains isolated in Istanbul, Turkey
M. Ang-kucuker et al., Phage types, antibiotic susceptibilities and plasmid profiles of Salmonella typhimurium and Salmonella enteritidis strains isolated in Istanbul, Turkey, CL MICRO IN, 6(11), 2000, pp. 593-599
Objective To examine 13 Salmonella typhimurium and 22 S, enteritidis strain
s isolated from individual cases of gastroenteritis for their phage types,
antibiotic susceptibilities and plasmid profiles.
Methods The phage typing of S, typhimurium strains was done according to th
e method of Anderson et al, and the phage typing scheme of Ward et al was u
sed for phage typing of S. enteritidis strains. Antibiotic susceptibility t
esting was performed by the Kirby-Bauer disk diffusion method. Extended-spe
ctrum beta -lactamase production of the strains was determined by the three
-dimensional method. Plasmid profiles of the strains were examined using th
e method described by Kado and Liu with some modification by Graeber et al.
Results Two S. typhimurium strains were DT 193 and one was DT 22, whereas 1
0 strains were untypable. PT 4 was the predominant phage type among S. ente
ritidis strains. Four S. enteritidis strains were DT 6a, three strains were
PT 8 and one strain was PT 8, whereas only one strain was untypable. Eleve
n of 13 S. typhimurium and three of 22 S, enteritidis strains were found to
be multiresistant. Ten different resistance patterns among S, typhimurium
and four different resistance patterns among S. enteritidis strains were de
tected. Extended-spectrum beta -lactamase production was detected in 10 of
13 S, typhimurium and in three of 22 S, enteritidis strains. All S, typhimu
rium strains but one were found to contain at least one plasmid, with molec
ular masses varying between 4 and 107 MDa, and 11 different plasmid pattern
s were determined Plasmid pattern analysis permitted further differentiatio
n of the S. enteritidis strains into nine groups. A serovar-specific virule
nce plasmid of 36 MDa was detected in 13 of 22 S, enteritidis strains.
Conclusions The results suggest that the majority of S, typhimurium strains
were closely related.