Abstract
Enterococcus species are used as One Health indicators of antimicrobial resistance (AMR) in humans, animals, and the environment. A surveillance study in beef cows and calves isolated Enterococcus casseliflavus along with E. faecium, E. faecalis, and E. hirae. Given the high prevalence of E. casseliflavus, we elected to characterize this species to better understand its role in the antimicrobial resistance of enterococci in cows and calves. Almost 12% of E. casseliflavus isolates exhibited multidrug resistance with the majority being resistant to lincomycin (99%), followed by quinupristin-dalfopristin (34%), ciprofloxacin (9.6%), tylosin (4.5%), erythromycin (2.7%), tetracycline (1.8%), tigecycline (1.5%), daptomycin (0.6%), streptomycin (0.3%), and kanamycin (0.3%). All E. casseliflavus were susceptible to chloramphenicol, penicillin, streptomycin, nitrofurantoin, gentamicin, and linezolid. Whole genome antimicrobial resistance gene profiling identified vanC-type intrinsic vancomycin resistance genes in all E. casseliflavus, with the vanC4XYT gene cluster being dominant (67%) followed by vanC2XYT (31%) and vanC3XYT (1.5%). Resistance genes for erythromycin (ermB) and tetracycline (tetM) were rarely identified (2.1% and 1.2%, respectively) within E. casseliflavus genomes. No resistance genes were identified to explain either the quinupristin-dalfopristin or ciprofloxacin resistance in these isolates. A core genome phylogenetic tree revealed two clades that exhibited no distinct association with the age of the host, time of sample collection, or the farm sampled. The open nature of the E. casseliflavus pan-genome highlighted its intraspecies diversity. These findings suggest that E. casseliflavus is likely a low-risk species in terms of contributing to antimicrobial resistance in the cow-calf sector.