%0 Journal Article %A Moreno Romo, Miguel Ángel %A García Soto, Silvia %A Hernández, Marta %A Bárcena Asensio, María Carmen %A Rodríguez Lázaro, David %A Ugarte Ruiz, María %A Domínguez Rodríguez, Lucas José %T Day-old chicks are a source of antimicrobial resistant bacteria for laying hen farms %D 2019 %@ 0378-1135 %@ 1873-2542 %U https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14352/111250 %X Antimicrobial resistant bacteria are rarely detected in laying hens and the objective of this longitudinal study was to test day-old chick as a source. Four different commercial batches raised on the same farm were monitored from day-old chick to laying hens using Escherichia coli as a model. Ten colonies from each of the eight samplings per batch were tested for antimicrobial susceptibility using 14 antimicrobials.Overall (313 isolates), higher resistance percentages were detected for tetracycline (26.8%), followed by sulphonamides (16.3%), ampicillin (16.0 %) and quinolones (10.9% and 9.3% for ciprofloxacin and nalidixic acid, respectively). Resistance percentages of bacteria from day-old chicks were higher than those of pullets and hens (p < 0.05) for tetracycline, sulphonamides, trimethoprim and chloramphenicol.Forty different phenotypic resistance profiles were detected, led by fully susceptible (182 isolates; 58.1%), and followed by single tetracycline (28 isolates; 8.9%) and ciprofloxacin/ nalidixic acid (11 isolates; 3.5%) profiles.By whole-genome sequencing, 17 genes and mutations of five chromosomal genes related to resistance were detected, the most frequent being tetA, blaTEM-1B and sul1.Using multilocus sequencing analysis, 58 different MLST types were detected, most of them only in a particular sample. The ST155 (27/142) was the most frequently detected, followed by ST10 (19/142) and ST48 (9/142).The fate on the farm of the detected E. coli populations in old-day chicks was not clear, but our data suggest that they did not remain in the predominant faecal population of pullets and laying hens. %~