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Adhesion of canine and human uropathogenicEscherichia coli andProteus mirabilis strains to canine and human epithelial cells
Authors:Elisa Garcia  Anja M. Hamers  Hans E. N. Bergmans  Bernard A. M. van der Zeijst  Dr. Wim Gaastra
Affiliation:(1) Institute of Infectious Diseases and Immunology, Department of Bacteriology, Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, University of Utrecht, Yalelaan 1, P.O. Box 80.165, 3508 TD Utrecht, The Netherlands;(2) Department of Molecular Cell Biology, University of Utrecht, Utrecht, The Netherlands
Abstract:Escherichia coli strains causing urinary tract infections in dogs produce fimbriae composed of fimbrial subunits closely related to the F12 and F13 fimbriae of human uropathogenic strains [4]. The adhesins carried by the fimbriae of human and canine isolates differ, however, as concluded from a different hemagglutination pattern and from the fact that the dog strains do not agglutinate latex beads coated with P-fimbriae receptor. This possible difference in adhesive specificity was confirmed by experiments in which the adhesion of human and dog isolates to dog kidney epithelial cells (MDCK cells) and human bladder epithelial cells (T24 cells) was compared. Dog uropathogenic strains, in contrast to human uropathogenicE. coli strains, adhere to MDCK cells but hardly to T24 cells. Adhesion to MDCK cells correlates with the presence of F12 or F13 fimbriae on the dog strains. These results suggest that homologous fimbrial subunits can carry different adhesin molecules and that these adhesin molecules can be responsible for species-specific adherence. On the contrary, adhesion of a number of dog uropathogenicProteus mirabilis strains to MDCK and T24 cells was not species specific; it depended on the mere presence of fimbriae.
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