The impact of florfenicol treatment on the microbial populations present in the gill, intestine, and skin of channel catfish (Ictalurus punctatus)
Hongye Wang, Lina Sheng, Zeinab Yazdi, Xiran Li, Zhuosheng Liu, Sushumna Canakapalli, Yi Zhou, Chao Liao, Shiva Emami, Anita M. Kelly, Luke A. Roy, Esteban Soto, Luxin Wang

TL;DR
This study examines how the antibiotic florfenicol affects the microbial communities in channel catfish, focusing on recovery after treatment.
Contribution
The study reveals the lasting effects of florfenicol on catfish microbiota and antibiotic resistance, particularly in the intestine.
Findings
Intestinal microbial diversity increased significantly after the withdrawal period.
Florfenicol treatment altered the intestinal microbial community structure.
Proteobacteria was the most predominant phylum across gill, intestine, and skin.
Abstract
Florfenicol is a broad-spectrum antimicrobial approved in many countries for treating bacterial infections in production animals. Although florfenicol has been widely used in the US catfish industry, its impact on the native microbiota within catfish tissues remains largely unknown. Florfenicol treatment is followed by a mandatory withdrawal period to ensure drug residues fall below regulatory limits before harvest. This interval also allows for the potential recovery of the native microbiota. In particular, the skin and gill microbiota have often been overlooked in aquaculture microbiome research. Moreover, the dynamics of microbial communities and resistome profiles following drug withdrawal are still poorly understood, despite their ecological significance. A significant increase in intestinal microbial diversity was observed at the end of the withdrawal period. The highest alpha…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAquaculture disease management and microbiota · Microbial infections and disease research · Pharmaceutical and Antibiotic Environmental Impacts
