Antibiotic Resistance and Plasmid Profiling of Esherichia Coli Isolates of Drinking Water
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Department of Microbiology
Abstract
E. coli has a central role in water microbiology due to its indicator value of faecal
pollution. Antibiotic resistance and its dissemination in water is a serious public health
issue. The objective of the study was to explore the occurrence and distribution of E.
coli in drinking water, their susceptibility to antibiotics and plasmid profiling.
This study was conducted at Laboratory of Central Department of Microbiology, from
January to August 2011. A total of 66 water samples from tap, well and spring
sources were bacteriological parameters. Disc diffusion was followed for antibiogram
and plasmid DNA of thermotolerent E. coli was extracted by mini alkaline lysis
following gel electrophoresis.
Type of water sources were not significantly associated with the presence of coliform
(P=0.155) and thermotolerant coliform (P=0.235) and the significant association in
thermotolerant coliform and thermotolerant E. coli was found for all sources tap
(P=0.029), well (P=0.028), spring (P=0.05) but total coliform and E. coli association
was found for well (P=0.01). Average count of thermotolerant E. coli was found
higher than E. coli in all sources. All E. coli were found sensitive towards Ofloxacin,
Chromphenicol and Cotrimixazole. Resistance to Cefexime, Amikacin and Nalidixic
acid, Amoxicillin, Tetracycline were 54.8%, 29% 35.5%, 80.6%, 93.5% and 57.6%,
36.4%, 39.4%, 94%, 100% was observed in E. coli and thermotolerant E. coli
respectively. High MDR 25 (75.8%) of thermotolerant E. coli was observed than E.
coli 22 (70.9%). In gel electrophoresis, single band of plasmid were observed in three
MDR isolates and one non-MDR isolate and size varied from 2kb to >10kb. All NAR
thermotolerant E. coli were found to harbor plasmid.
Drinking water of Kathmandu is contaminated with drug resistance E. coli and
plasmid mediated resistance to Nalidixic acid has emerged indicating possible
outbreak of drug resistance enteric bacteria.
