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Effects of low concentrations of erythromycin, penicillin, and virginiamycin on bacterial resistance development in vitro.

Scientific reports (2017-09-10)
Beilei Ge, Kelly J Domesle, Qianru Yang, Shenia R Young, Crystal L Rice-Trujillo, Sonya M Bodeis Jones, Stuart A Gaines, Marla W Keller, Xin Li, Silvia A Piñeiro, Brooke M Whitney, Heather C Harbottle, Jeffrey M Gilbert
RÉSUMÉ

Distillers grains are co-products of the corn ethanol industry widely used in animal feed. We examined the effects of erythromycin, penicillin, and virginiamycin at low concentrations reflective of those detected in distillers grains on bacterial resistance selection. At 0.1 µg/ml erythromycin, macrolide-resistant mutants were induced in one Campylobacter coli and one Enterococcus faecium strain, while these strains plus three additional C. coli, one additional E. faecium, and one C. jejuni also developed resistance when exposed to 0.25 µg/ml erythromycin. At 0.5 µg/ml erythromycin, a total of eight strains (four Campylobacter and four Enterococcus) obtained macrolide-resistant mutants, including two strains from each genus that were not selected at lower erythromycin concentrations. For penicillin, three of five E. faecium strains but none of five Enterococcus faecalis strains consistently developed resistance at all three selection concentrations. Virginiamycin at two M

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Virginiamycin M1, ≥95% (HPLC)