TY - GEN T1 - Relatedness of wildlife and livestock avian isolates of the nosocomial pathogen Acinetobacter baumannii to lineages spread in hospitals worldwide AU - Wilharm, Gottfried AU - Skiebe, Evelyn AU - Higgins, Paul G. AU - Poppel, Marie T. AU - Blaschke, Ulrike AU - Leser, Sarah AU - Heider, Christine AU - Heindorf, Magdalena AU - Brauner, Paul AU - Jäckel, Udo AU - Böhland, Karin AU - Cuny, Christiane AU - Lopinska, Andzelina AU - Kaminski, Piotr AU - Kasprzak, Mariusz AU - Bochenski, Marcin AU - Ciebiera, Olaf AU - Tobolka, Marcin AU - Layer, Franziska AU - Bender, Jennifer K. AU - Fuchs, Stephan AU - Semmler, Torsten AU - Pfeifer, Yvonne AU - Jerzak, Leszek AB - The natural habitats and potential reservoirs of the nosocomial pathogen Acinetobacter baumannii are poorly defined. Here, we put forth and tested the hypothesis of avian reservoirs of A. baumannii. We screened tracheal and rectal swab samples from livestock (chicken, geese) and wild birds (white stork nestlings) and isolated A. baumannii from 3% of sampled chicken (n = 220), 8% of geese (n = 40) and 25% of white stork nestlings (n = 661). Virulence of selected avian A. baumannii isolates was comparable to that of clinical isolates in the Galleria mellonella infection model. Whole genome sequencing revealed the close relationship of an antibiotic-susceptible chicken isolate from Germany with a multidrug-resistant human clinical isolate from China and additional linkages between livestock isolates and human clinical isolates related to international clonal lineages. Moreover, we identified stork isolates related to human clinical isolates from the United States. Multilocus sequence typing disclosed further kinship between avian and human isolates. Avian isolates do not form a distinct clade within the phylogeny of A. baumannii, instead they diverge into different lineages. Further, we provide evidence that A. baumannii is constantly present in the habitats occupied by storks. Collectively, our study suggests A. baumannii could be a zoonotic organism that may disseminate into livestock. KW - 610 Medizin PY - 2017 LA - eng PB - Robert Koch-Institut VL - 19 IS - 10 DO - 10.1111/1462-2920.13931 ER -