Salmonella Thompson, an important foodborne pathogen, is rarely found to be pathogenic to poultry. Accidentally,
S. Thompson was found to be pathogenic to embryos of white feather broiler at a poultry farm in China. Therefore, this study aimed to explore antimicrobial resistance and
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Salmonella Thompson, an important foodborne pathogen, is rarely found to be pathogenic to poultry. Accidentally,
S. Thompson was found to be pathogenic to embryos of white feather broiler at a poultry farm in China. Therefore, this study aimed to explore antimicrobial resistance and pathogenicity of clinical
S. Thompson isolated from dead poultry embryos. The phylogenetic tree based on 16S rRNA and seven housekeeping genes showed that the 14 clinical
S. Thompson were closely related. The core-genome multilocus sequence typing of 14 clinical
S. Thompson based on whole-genome sequencing was cgST-12774, consistent with the only two strains of
S. Thompson from humans in China as reported in the NCBI database. The antimicrobial resistance gene analysis demonstrated that all strains carried
aac(6′)-Iaa and the polymyxin resistance gene
mcr-9. Antimicrobial sensitivity tests for 18 antibiotics showed that
S. Thompson isolates displayed resistance against streptomycin (100%), ampicillin (35.7%), and doxycycline (14.3%), but sensitivity to polymyxin B, proving that the
mcr-9 gene had not appeared resistance phenotype. Virulence genes
Salmonella pathogenicity island (SPI) SPI1-5, type I fimbriae gene (
fimA), flagellar assembly genes (
bcfC,
flhD,
fliA,
fliC,
fljB,
flgK, and
lpfC), and other virulence genes (
iroN,
pagC, and
cigR) were found in each
S. Thompson isolate. Additionally, the bacterial inoculation experiment with 1-day-old chicks revealed that clinical
S. Thompson was highly pathogenic to newborn chicks after yolk sac inoculation. This study highlighted that the
S. Thompson isolated from poultry embryos and the
S. Thompson causing human foodborne diarrhea in some parts of China belong to the same cgMLST typology (cgST-12774) and showed the pathogenicity of this clinical
S. Thompson to chicks.
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