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1.
Multiplex PCR analyses of DNAs from genotypically unique Escherichia coli strains isolated from the feces of 138 humans and 376 domesticated animals from Jeonnam Province, South Korea, performed using primers specific for the chuA and yjaA genes and an unknown DNA fragment, TSPE4.C2, indicated that none of the strains belonged to E. coli phylogenetic group B2. In contrast, phylogenetic group B2 strains were detected in about 17% (8 of 48) of isolates from feces of 24 wild geese and in 3% (3 of 96) of isolates obtained from the Yeongsan River in Jeonnam Province, South Korea. The distribution of E. coli strains in phylogenetic groups A, B1, and D varied depending on the host examined, and there was no apparent seasonal variation in the distribution of strains in phylogenetic groups among the Yeongsan River isolates. The distribution of four virulence genes (eaeA, hlyA, stx1, and stx2) in isolates was also examined by using multiplex PCR. Virulence genes were detected in about 5% (38 of 707) of the total group of unique strains examined, with 24, 13, 13, and 9 strains containing hlyA, eaeA, stx2, and stx1, respectively. The virulence genes were most frequently present in phylogenetic group B1 strains isolated from beef cattle. Taken together, results of these studies indicate that E. coli strains in phylogenetic group B2 were rarely found in humans and domesticated animals in Jeonnam Province, South Korea, and that the majority of strains containing virulence genes belonged to phylogenetic group B1 and were isolated from beef cattle. Results of this study also suggest that the relationship between the presence and types of virulence genes and phylogenetic groupings may differ among geographically distinct E. coli populations.Escherichia coli is a normal inhabitant of the lower intestinal tract of warm-blooded animals and humans. While the majority of E. coli strains are commensals, some are known to be pathogenic, causing intestinal and extraintestinal diseases, such as diarrhea and urinary tract infections (42). Phylogenetic studies done using multilocus enzyme electrophoresis and 72 E. coli strains in the E. coli reference collection showed that E. coli strains can be divided into four phylogenetic groups (A, B1, B2, and D) (20, 41, 48). Recently, a potential fifth group (E) has also been proposed (11). Since multiplex PCR was developed for analysis of phylogenetic groups (6), a number of studies have analyzed a variety of E. coli strains for their phylogenetic group association (10, 12, 17, 18, 23, 54). Duriez et al. (10) reported the possible influence of geographic conditions, dietary factors, use of antibiotics, and/or host genetic factors on the distribution of phylogenetic groups among 168 commensal E. coli strains isolated from human stools from three geographically distinct populations in France, Croatia, and Mali. Random-amplified polymorphic DNA analysis of the intraspecies distribution of E. coli in pregnant women and neonates indicated that there was a correlation between the distribution of phylogenetic groups, random-amplified polymorphic DNA groups, and virulence factors (54). Moreover, based on comparisons of the distribution of E. coli phylogenetic groups among humans of different sexes and ages, it has been suggested that E. coli genotypes are likely influenced by morphological, physiological, and dietary differences (18). In addition, climate has also been proposed to influence the distribution of strains within E. coli phylogenetic groups (12). There are now several reports indicating that there is a potential relationship between E. coli phylogenetic groups, age, and disease. For example, E. coli isolates belonging to phylogenetic group B2 have been shown to predominate in infants with neonatal bacterial meningitis (27) and among urinary tract and rectal isolates (55). Also, Nowrouzian et al. (39) and Moreno et al. (37) reported that strains belonging to phylogenetic group B2 persisted among the intestinal microflora of infants and were more likely to cause clinical symptoms.Boyd and Hartl (2) reported that among the E. coli strains in the E. coli reference and the diarrheagenic E. coli collections, strains in phylogenetic group B2 carry the greatest number of virulence factors, followed by those in group D. Virulence factors carried by group B2 strains are thought to contribute to their strong colonizing capacity; a greater number of virulence genes have been detected in resident strains than in transient ones (38). Moreover, a mouse model of extraintestinal virulence showed that phylogenetic group B2 strains killed mice at greater frequency and possessed more virulence determinants than strains in other phylogenetic groups, suggesting a link between phylogeny and virulence genes in E. coli extraintestinal infection (45). In contrast, Johnson and Kuskowski (25) suggested that a group B2 ancestral strain might have simply acquired virulence genes by chance and that these genes were vertically inherited by group members during clonal expansion. However, numerous studies published to date suggest that there is a relationship between the genomic background of phylogenetic group B2 and its association with virulence factors (12, 28, 35, 39, 45).Both enteropathogenic and enterohemorrhagic E. coli (EPEC and EHEC, respectively) strains are among the most important food-borne pathogens worldwide, often causing severe gastrointestinal disease and fatal infections (13). While EPEC strains cause diarrhea and generally do not produce enterotoxin, they possess an adherence factor which is controlled by the chromosomal gene eaeA, encoding intimin (8). Unlike the EPEC strains, however, the EHEC strains typically contain the hlyA, stx1, and stx2 virulence genes, encoding hemolysins and Shiga-like type 1 and 2 toxins, respectively, and eaeA. The ability to detect EHEC has been greatly facilitated by the use of multiplex PCR (13, 44, 53). Several studies have shown that strains producing Shiga-like toxin 2 are more frequently found in cases of hemolytic-uremic syndrome than are those containing Shiga-like toxin 1 (30, 43, 46, 49).In the study reported here, we examined the distribution of phylogenetic groups and the prevalence of virulence genes in 659 genotypically unique E. coli strains isolated from humans and domestic animals in South Korea. In addition, we also tested 48 and 96 nonunique E. coli isolates from wild geese and the Yeongsan River, respectively, for phylogenetic distribution and virulence gene profiles. Here, we report that contrary to what has been previously reported in other parts of the world, no E. coli strains belonging to phylogenetic group B2 were found in domesticated animals and in humans from Jeonnam Province, South Korea. We also report that among the strains we examined, virulence genes were mainly found in phylogenetic group B1 strains isolated from beef cattle. Results of these studies may prove to be useful for the development of risk management strategies to maintain public health.  相似文献   

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We investigated the prevalence and persistence of Escherichia coli strains in four sewage treatment plants (STPs) in a subtropical region of Queensland, Australia. In all, 264 E. coli strains were typed using a high-resolution biochemical fingerprinting method and grouped into either a single or a common biochemical phenotype (S-BPT and C-BPT, respectively). These strains were also tested for their phylogenetic groups and 12 virulence genes associated with intestinal and extraintestinal E. coli strains. Comparison of BPTs at various treatment stages indicated that certain BPTs were found in two or all treatment stages. These BPTs constituted the highest proportion of E. coli strains in each STP and belonged mainly to phylogenetic group B2 and, to a lesser extent, group D. No virulence genes associated with intestinal E. coli were found among the strains, but 157 (59.5%) strains belonging to 14 C-BPTs carried one or more virulence genes associated with uropathogenic strains. Of these, 120 (76.4%) strains belonged to seven persistent C-BPTs and were found in all four STPs. Our results indicate that certain clonal groups of E. coli with virulence characteristics of uropathogenic strains can survive the treatment processes of STPs. These strains were common to all STPs and constituted the highest proportion of the strains in different treatment tanks of each STP.Community sewage treatment plants (STPs) receive waste from diverse sources, including residential, industrial, and recreational facilities (31). Waste generated from these facilities contains the liquid and fecal discharges of humans and animals, household wastes, industry-specific materials, and storm water runoff (31). These materials are treated through primary, secondary, and tertiary sedimentation processes (18). Following these processes, effluent is normally clear and thus often recycled for nonpotable use (20), with excess water released into receiving waterways. However, due to possible malfunctions or poor management of wastewater systems (1), effluent containing pathogenic bacteria can be discharged into receiving waterways (11, 34). It has been speculated that waters contaminated with feces are a great risk to human health, as they are likely to contain human-specific enteric pathogens, including Salmonella spp. (30), Shigella spp. (10), enteroviruses (12), hepatitis A virus (13), and pathogenic Escherichia coli (30).E. coli, while widely used as an indicator bacterium (30, 35), can actually be pathogenic and be responsible for both intestinal and extraintestinal diseases (16). Intestinal pathogenic strains of E. coli are rarely encountered in the fecal flora of healthy hosts. Extraintestinal pathogenic E. coli (ExPEC) strains commonly cause infections of any organ or anatomical site (28). The ability of these pathogenic bacteria to cause disease is due to their acquisition of specialized virulence factors, which commensal E. coli strains typically lack. These specialized virulence factors allow them to cause a broad spectrum of diseases (17, 28), such as gastroenteritis (34), diarrhea (16), urinary tract infections and meningitis (29), and soft tissue infections and bacteremia (28). E. coli strains belong to four main phylogenetic groups (A, B1, B2, and D) (2), with pathogenic strains belonging mostly to phylogenetic group B2 and, to a lesser extent, group D. Another phylogenetic group (group E) has also been identified; however, it is uncommon and is not widely used (5).Presently, chlorination is an extremely widespread practice aimed at reducing the pathogen load in the final effluent to levels low enough to ensure that the organisms will not cause disease when the wastewater is discharged (31). Despite this, some pathogenic strains of E. coli may survive to become a significant public health risk (14, 35). The aim of this study was to investigate the presence and survival of these pathogenic E. coli strains during the treatment processes of four community STPs with different capacities in South East Queensland, Australia.  相似文献   

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A bioinformatic analysis of nearly 400 genomes indicates that the overwhelming majority of bacteria possess homologs of the Escherichia coli proteins FtsL, FtsB, and FtsQ, three proteins essential for cell division in that bacterium. These three bitopic membrane proteins form a subcomplex in vivo, independent of the other cell division proteins. Here we analyze the domains of E. coli FtsL that are involved in the interaction with other cell division proteins and important for the assembly of the divisome. We show that FtsL, as we have found previously with FtsB, packs an enormous amount of information in its sequence for interactions with proteins upstream and downstream in the assembly pathway. Given their size, it is likely that the sole function of the complex of these two proteins is to act as a scaffold for divisome assembly.The division of an Escherichia coli cell into two daughter cells requires a complex of proteins, the divisome, to coordinate the constriction of the three layers of the Gram-negative cell envelope. In E. coli, there are 10 proteins known to be essential for cell division; in the absence of any one of these proteins, cells continue to elongate and to replicate and segregate their chromosomes but fail to divide (29). Numerous additional nonessential proteins have been identified that localize to midcell and assist in cell division (7-9, 20, 25, 34, 56, 59).A localization dependency pathway has been determined for the 10 essential division proteins (FtsZ→FtsA/ZipA→FtsK→FtsQ→FtsL/FtsB→FtsW→FtsI→FtsN), suggesting that the divisome assembles in a hierarchical manner (29). Based on this pathway, a given protein depends on the presence of all upstream proteins (to the left) for its localization and that protein is then required for the localization of the downstream division proteins (to the right). While the localization dependency pathway of cell division proteins suggests that a sequence of interactions is necessary for divisome formation, recent work using a variety of techniques reveals that a more complex web of interactions among these proteins is necessary for a functionally stable complex (6, 10, 19, 23, 24, 30-32, 40). While numerous interactions have been identified between division proteins, further work is needed to define which domains are involved and which interactions are necessary for assembly of the divisome.One subcomplex of the divisome, composed of the bitopic membrane proteins FtsB, FtsL, and FtsQ, appears to be the bridge between the predominantly cytoplasmic cell division proteins and the predominantly periplasmic cell division proteins (10). FtsB, FtsL, and FtsQ share a similar topology: short amino-terminal cytoplasmic domains and larger carboxy-terminal periplasmic domains. This tripartite complex can be divided further into a subcomplex of FtsB and FtsL, which forms in the absence of FtsQ and interacts with the downstream division proteins FtsW and FtsI in the absence of FtsQ (30). The presence of an FtsB/FtsL/FtsQ subcomplex appears to be evolutionarily conserved, as there is evidence that the homologs of FtsB, FtsL, and FtsQ in the Gram-positive bacteria Bacillus subtilis and Streptococcus pneumoniae also assemble into complexes (18, 52, 55).The assembly of the FtsB/FtsL/FtsQ complex is important for the stabilization and localization of one or more of its component proteins in both E. coli and B. subtilis (11, 16, 18, 33). In E. coli, FtsB and FtsL are codependent for their stabilization and for localization to midcell, while FtsQ does not require either FtsB or FtsL for its stabilization or localization to midcell (11, 33). Both FtsL and FtsB require FtsQ for localization to midcell, and in the absence of FtsQ the levels of full-length FtsB are significantly reduced (11, 33). The observed reduction in full-length FtsB levels that occurs in the absence of FtsQ or FtsL results from the degradation of the FtsB C terminus (33). However, the C-terminally degraded FtsB generated upon depletion of FtsQ can still interact with and stabilize FtsL (33).While a portion of the FtsB C terminus is dispensable for interaction with FtsL and for the recruitment of the downstream division proteins FtsW and FtsI, it is required for interaction with FtsQ (33). Correspondingly, the FtsQ C terminus also appears to be important for interaction with FtsB and FtsL (32, 61). The interaction between FtsB and FtsL appears to be mediated by the predicted coiled-coil motifs within the periplasmic domains of the two proteins, although only the membrane-proximal half of the FtsB coiled coil is necessary for interaction with FtsL (10, 32, 33). Additionally, the transmembrane domains of FtsB and FtsL are important for their interaction with each other, while the cytoplasmic domain of FtsL is not necessary for interaction with FtsB, which has only a short 3-amino-acid cytoplasmic domain (10, 33).In this study, we focused on the interaction domains of FtsL. We find that, as with FtsB, the C terminus of FtsL is required for the interaction of FtsQ with the FtsB/FtsL subcomplex while the cytoplasmic domain of FtsL is involved in recruitment of the downstream division proteins. Finally, we provide a comprehensive analysis of the presence of FtsB, FtsL, and FtsQ homologs among bacteria and find that the proteins of this complex are likely more widely distributed among bacteria than was previously thought.  相似文献   

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The diversity of the Escherichia coli species is in part due to the large number of mobile genetic elements that are exchanged between strains. We report here the identification of a new integrative and conjugative element (ICE) of the pKLC102/PAGI-2 family located downstream of the tRNA gene pheU in the E. coli strain BEN374. Indeed, this new region, which we called ICEEc2, can be transferred by conjugation from strain BEN374 to the E. coli strain C600. We were also able to transfer this region into a Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium strain and into a Yersinia pseudotuberculosis strain. This transfer was then followed by the integration of ICEEc2 into the host chromosome downstream of a phe tRNA gene. Our data indicated that this transfer involved a set of three genes encoding DNA mobility enzymes and a type IV pilus encoded by genes present on ICEEc2. Given the wide distribution of members of this family, these mobile genetic elements are likely to play an important role in the diversification of bacteria.The fantastic diversity of the Escherichia coli species has been known for a long time. With modern sequencing strategies, the molecular bases of this diversity are now being unraveled (49). Analyzing the genome of 20 E. coli strains, Touchon et al. recently showed that only a minority of genes, approximately 1,900 genes, were shared by all E. coli strains and constituted the core genome of the E. coli species (50). Additionally, the total number of genes found in all E. coli strains, the pan-genome, is an order of magnitude larger than this core genome (50). The non-core genome of a strain, also called flexible gene pool, is therefore made of a wide diversity of genes. This genetic diversity of the E. coli species translates into a diversity of phenotypic properties. While most E. coli strains are commensal of the gastrointestinal tract of humans and warm-blooded animals, a significant number are responsible for different diseases in humans and animals (22), including extraintestinal infections in chickens; strains isolated from such cases are designated by the term APEC for avian pathogenic E. coli (10).This diversity arises from frequent horizontal gene transfers of mobile genetic elements such as transposons, plasmids, phages, genomic islands, or integrative and conjugative elements (ICEs) (11, 21, 34). Among these mobile genetic elements, ICEs have a particular place as they share properties with both plasmids, genomic islands, and transposons; they can be defined as elements that encode all the necessary machineries that allow their excision from the chromosome, their transfer to a recipient strain, and their integration into the recipient strain''s genome (5, 6, 46, 54). Well-known representatives of this class of genetic elements include Tn916 discovered in Enterococcus faecalis, the conjugative transposon CTnDOT in Bacteroides thetaiotaomicron, ICEKp1 in Klebsiella pneumoniae, SXT/R391-related elements, PFGI-1 in Pseudomonas fluorescens, and the clc element in Pseudomonas sp. strain B13 as well as ICEBs1 in Bacillus subtilis and ICEEc1 in the E. coli strain ECOR31 (1, 39, 44, 46, 54). Typically, ICEs contain at least three modules that are required for key steps in the ICE''s life cycle: an excision/integration module, a transfer module, and a regulation module (54). Besides these, ICEs often contain cargo regions that confer on their host a diverse array of properties, such as virulence properties (ICEEc1), antibiotic resistance (SXT), or degradation of chemical compounds (clc). Because of their self-transfer abilities and their diverse accessory gene repertoires, ICEs are very likely to play a major role in bacteria evolution (46).A new family of ICEs has recently gained interest and was named the pKLC102/PAGI-2 family. The first element of this family, the clc element, was discovered in Pseudomonas sp. strain B13 and confers on the bacteria the possibility to degrade aromatic compounds (42). The transfer of this element was discovered long before its complete sequence was characterized (16). Other members of this family include several elements present in Pseudomonas strains such as PAGI-1 and PAGI-2 as well as the pKLC102 element first considered to be a plasmid but later on shown to be an ICE because of its ability to integrate into the chromosome of its host (23, 52). pKLC102/PAGI-2 elements share a set of core genes (33) and, like most ICEs and genomic islands, are all integrated downstream of tRNA genes (26, 52). The transfer between strains has been demonstrated, albeit with different frequencies, for only a few members, such as the clc element, Pseudomonas aeruginosa pathogenicity island 1 (PAPI-1), and ICEHin1056 from Haemophilus influenzae (20, 37, 41); this transfer involves the type IV pilus (20), the integrase (40), and in some cases the formation of a circular intermediate of the excised ICE (24).In order to identify new accessory genes of APEC strains, we previously described tRNA loci in the E. coli genome that could represent potential insertion sites for new genomic islands (18). We had already used this strategy to characterize the AGI-3 region that is involved in the virulence of an avian pathogenic E. coli strain and that confers the ability to grow on fructooligosaccharides (7, 43). During this tRNA screening, we showed that genomic islands might potentially be present downstream of the tRNA genes argW, leuX, pheU, pheV, selC, serU, and thrW in several APEC strains.In this report, we describe the identification of a new genomic island located downstream of pheU in the APEC strain BEN374. This region, which we named ICEEc2, was fully sequenced, and its properties were analyzed in detail; ICEEc2 is a new ICE found in E. coli and belongs to the pKLC102/PAGI-2 family described above.  相似文献   

7.
To discern the possible spread of the Escherichia coli O25b:H4-ST131 clonal group in poultry and the zoonotic potential of avian strains, we made a retrospective search of our strain collection and compared the findings for those strains with the findings for current strains. Thus, we have characterized a collection of 19 avian O25b:H4-ST131 E. coli strains isolated from 1995 to 2010 which, interestingly, harbored the ibeA gene. Using this virulence gene as a criterion for selection, we compared those 19 avian strains with 33 human O25b:H4-ST131 ibeA-positive E. coli strains obtained from patients with extraintestinal infections (1993 to 2009). All 52 O25b:H4-ST131 ibeA-positive E. coli strains shared the fimH, kpsMII, malX, and usp genes but showed statistically significant differences in nine virulence factors, namely, papGIII, cdtB, sat, and kpsMII K5, which were associated with human strains, and iroN, kpsMII K1, cvaC, iss, and tsh, which were associated with strains of avian origin. The XbaI macrorestriction profiles of the 52 E. coli O25b:H4-ST131 ibeA-positive strains revealed 11 clusters (clusters I to XI) of >85% similarity, with four clusters including strains of human and avian origin. Cluster VII (90.9% similarity) grouped 10 strains (7 avian and 3 human strains) that mostly produced CTX-M-9 and that also shared the same virulence profile. Finally, we compared the macrorestriction profiles of the 12 CTX-M-9-producing O25b:H4-ST131 ibeA strains (7 avian and 5 human strains) identified among the 52 strains with those of 15 human O25b:H4-ST131 CTX-M-14-, CTX-M-15-, and CTX-M-32-producing strains that proved to be negative for ibeA and showed that they clearly differed in the level of similarity from the CTX-M-9-producing strains. In conclusion, E. coli clonal group O25b:H4-ST131 ibeA has recently emerged among avian isolates with the new acquisition of the K1 capsule antigen and includes CTX-M-9-producing strains. This clonal group represents a real zoonotic risk that has crossed the barrier between human and avian hosts.Strains of the extensively antimicrobial-resistant Escherichia coli clonal group of sequence type (ST) 131 (ST131) belonging to serotype O25b:H4 have recently been recognized to be important human pathogens worldwide (9, 33). Although it is commonly associated with the dissemination of CTX-M-15 extended-spectrum cephalosporin resistance, E. coli O25b:H4-ST131 also occurs as a fluoroquinolone (FQ)-resistant but cephalosporin-susceptible pathogen (5, 22, 26, 27). Currently, it is assumed that O25b:H4-ST131 strains circulate not only among humans but also among animal hosts (13, 21, 37), which would contribute to the ongoing global emergence of O25b:H4-ST131, in the case of regular transmission between animals and humans. Even though CTX-M-15 is the most widely distributed extended-spectrum beta-lactamase (ESBL) linked to this clonal group, other, different variants of CTX-M have recently been reported, such as CTX-M-9, CTX-M-14, and CTX-M-32 (4, 34, 36, 39). Noteworthy was the detection, for the first time on poultry farms, of this clonal group producing CTX-M-9 that had macrorestriction profiles and virulence genes very similar to those observed in clinical human isolates (10).Extraintestinal pathogenic E. coli (ExPEC) strains, which include avian pathogenic E. coli (APEC) and human uropathogenic E. coli (UPEC), septicemic E. coli, and newborn meningitis-causing E. coli (NMEC) strains, exhibit considerable genome diversity and have a wide range of virulence-associated factors (12, 18). While infections caused by APEC strains initially start as a respiratory tract disease which evolves to a systemic infection of the internal organs and, finally, to sepsis, the most frequent origin of human sepsis is urinary tract infection (UTI), especially pyelonephritis (2, 3, 11). However, APEC strains have been recognized to share common traits with human isolates (29, 30, 31), including the K1 capsule antigen (23, 24, 29) and the ibeA gene (14). In addition, retail chicken products have been found to carry nalidixic-resistant ExPEC strains (17, 19), and although it is drug susceptible, an E. coli strain belonging to the O25b:H4-ST131 clonal group has even recently been detected in retail chicken (41), supporting the urgent necessity for the implementation of food control measures.The aim of the present study was to discern the possible spread of the O25b:H4-ST131 clonal group, especially CTX-M-9-producing strains, in poultry and the zoonotic potential of avian isolates. For this purpose, we made a retrospective search of our human and avian strain collections and compared the findings for those strains with the findings for current strains. Identification of this emerging clone among avian sources and comparison of the clone with clinical human isolates will shed new light on the epidemiology of the O25b:H4-ST131 clonal group.  相似文献   

8.
Soils are typically considered to be suboptimal environments for enteric organisms, but there is increasing evidence that Escherichia coli populations can become resident in soil under favorable conditions. Previous work reported the growth of autochthonous E. coli in a maritime temperate Luvic Stagnosol soil, and this study aimed to characterize, by molecular and physiological means, the genetic diversity and physiology of environmentally persistent E. coli isolates leached from the soil. Molecular analysis (16S rRNA sequencing, enterobacterial repetitive intergenic consensus PCR, pulsed-field gel electrophoresis, and a multiplex PCR method) established the genetic diversity of the isolates (n = 7), while physiological methods determined the metabolic capability and environmental fitness of the isolates, relative to those of laboratory strains, under the conditions tested. Genotypic analysis indicated that the leached isolates do not form a single genetic grouping but that multiple genotypic groups are capable of surviving and proliferating in this environment. In physiological studies, environmental isolates grew well across a broad range of temperatures and media, in comparison with the growth of laboratory strains. These findings suggest that certain E. coli strains may have the ability to colonize and adapt to soil conditions. The resulting lack of fecal specificity has implications for the use of E. coli as an indicator of fecal pollution in the environment.Escherichia coli is a well-established indicator of fecal contamination in the environment. The organism''s validity as an indicator of water pollution is dependent, among other factors, on its fecal specificity and its inability to multiply outside the primary host, the gastrointestinal tracts of humans and warm-blooded animals (9). While many pathogens and indicator organisms are considered to be poorly adapted for long-term survival, or proliferation, outside their primary hosts (24), there is increasing evidence that this view needs to be reconsidered with respect to E. coli (17, 38). In particular, questions remain about its fate and survival capacity in environmental matrices, such as soil. While the habitat within the primary host is characterized by constant warm temperature conditions and a ready availability of nutrients and carbon, that of soil is often characterized by oligotrophic and highly dynamic conditions, temperature and pH variation, predatory populations, and competition with environmentally adapted indigenous microflora (39). Soils are thus typically considered to be suboptimal environments for enteric organisms, and growth is thought to be negligible, with die-off of organisms at rates reported to be a function of the interaction of numerous factors, including the type and physiological state of the microorganism, the physical, chemical, and biological properties of the soil, atmospheric conditions (including sunlight, moisture, and temperature), and organism application method (10).In recent years, the growth of E. coli in soils, sediments, and water in tropical and subtropical regions has been widely documented, and the organism is considered to be an established part of the soil biota within these regions (4, 5, 7, 12, 14, 19, 25, 32). The integration of E. coli as a component of the indigenous microflora in soils of tropical and subtropical regions may be attributable to the nutrient-rich nature and warm temperatures of these habitats (21, 39), combined with the metabolic versatility of the organism and its simple nutritional requirements (21). In addition to tropical and subtropical regions, the presence of autochthonous E. coli populations in the cooler soils of temperate and northern temperate regions has also been reported (6, 20, 22, 37), with one report on an alpine soil (34) and, most recently, a report on a maritime temperate grassland soil (3). The growth of E. coli within soils can act as a reservoir for the further contamination of bodies of water (20, 31, 32), compromising the indicator status of E. coli within these regions. As such, an understanding of the ecological characteristics of E. coli in soil is critical to its validation as an indicator organism. With respect to the input of pathogenic E. coli into the environment, this knowledge becomes essential for assessing the potential health risk to human and animal hosts from agricultural activities such as landspreading of manures and slurries (24).It has been suggested that E. coli can sustain autochthonous populations within soils in temperate regions, wherever favorable conditions exist (21). The phenotypic traits of the organism (including its metabolic diversity and its ability to grow both aerobically and anaerobically in a broad temperature range) may assist the persistence, colonization, and growth of E. coli when conditions permit. The challenging nature of the soil environment and the disparity of conditions between the primary host and the secondary habitat raises the question of how these E. coli populations survive and compete for niche space among the highly competitive and diverse coexisting populations of the indigenous microflora (15, 21). There is some evidence that naturalized E. coli may form genetically distinct populations in the environment (17, 20, 34, 36). This suggests that autochthonous E. coli populations in soil may have increased environmental fitness, facilitating their residence in soil (20, 34, 38). Little is known, however, of the physiology of these organisms, and their capacity for survival in soil remains poorly understood (21).Previous work (3) recorded continuous low-level leaching of viable E. coli from lysimeters of a poorly drained Luvic Stagnosol soil type, more than 9 years after the last application of fecal material. This finding was indicative of the growth of E. coli within the soil and suggested the presence of autochthonous E. coli populations within the soil that could be leached subsequently. To our knowledge, prior to this report, naturalized autochthonous E. coli populations persisting under the relatively oligotrophic, low-temperature conditions of maritime temperate soil environments had not been described previously. Growth within this soil was attributed chiefly to favorable characteristics of the soil, which include high clay and moisture contents, nutrient retention, and the presence of anaerobic zones. The objective of this work was to characterize, by molecular and physiological means, the genetic diversity and physiology of environmentally persistent E. coli isolates leached. In particular, we were interested in determining if the isolates possessed phenotypic characteristics that may enhance their capacity to survive and occupy niche space within the soil. This study tested the hypothesis that E. coli clones persisting in lysimeters of this soil form a genetically distinct grouping and possess a physiology tailored to the soil environment.  相似文献   

9.
A conjugative plasmid from the catheter-associated urinary tract infection strain Escherichia coli MS2027 was sequenced and annotated. This 42,644-bp plasmid, designated pMAS2027, contains 58 putative genes and is most closely related to plasmids belonging to incompatibility group X (IncX1). Plasmid pMAS2027 encodes two important virulence factors: type 3 fimbriae and a type IV secretion (T4S) system. Type 3 fimbriae, recently found to be functionally expressed in E. coli, played an important role in biofilm formation. Biofilm formation by E. coli MS2027 was specifically due to expression of type 3 fimbriae and not the T4S system. The T4S system, however, accounted for the conjugative ability of pMAS2027 and enabled a non-biofilm-forming strain to grow as part of a mixed biofilm following acquisition of this plasmid. Thus, the importance of conjugation as a mechanism to spread biofilm determinants was demonstrated. Conjugation may represent an important mechanism by which type 3 fimbria genes are transferred among the Enterobacteriaceae that cause device-related infections in nosocomial settings.Bacterial biofilms are complex communities of bacterial cells living in close association with a surface (17). Bacterial cells in these protected environments are often resistant to multiple factors, including antimicrobials, changes in the pH, oxygen radicals, and host immune defenses (19, 38). Biofilm formation is a property of many bacterial species, and a range of molecular mechanisms that facilitate this process have been described (2, 3, 11, 14, 16, 29, 33, 34). Often, the ability to form a biofilm is dependent on the production of adhesins on the bacterial cell surface. In Escherichia coli, biofilm formation is enhanced by the production of certain types of fimbriae (e.g., type 1 fimbriae, type 3 fimbriae, F1C, F9, curli, and conjugative pili) (14, 23, 25, 29, 33, 39, 46), cell surface adhesins (e.g., autotransporter proteins such as antigen 43, AidA, TibA, EhaA, and UpaG) (21, 34, 35, 40, 43), and flagella (22, 45).The close proximity of bacterial cells in biofilms creates an environment conducive for the exchange of genetic material. Indeed, plasmid-mediated conjugation in monospecific and mixed E. coli biofilms has been demonstrated (6, 18, 24, 31). The F plasmid represents the best-characterized conjugative system for biofilm formation by E. coli. The F pilus mediates adhesion to abiotic surfaces and stabilizes the biofilm structure through cell-cell interactions (16, 30). Many other conjugative plasmids also contribute directly to biofilm formation upon derepression of the conjugative function (16).One example of a conjugative system employed by gram-negative Enterobacteriaceae is the type 4 secretion (T4S) system. The T4S system is a multisubunit structure that spans the cell envelope and contains a secretion channel often linked to a pilus or other surface filament or protein (8). The Agrobacterium tumefaciens VirB-VirD4 system is the archetypical T4S system and is encoded by 11 genes in the virB operon and one gene (virD4) in the virD operon (7, 8). Genes with strong homology to genes in the virB operon have also been identified on other conjugative plasmids. For example, the pilX1 to pilX11 genes on the E. coli R6K IncX plasmid and the virB1 to virB11 genes are highly conserved at the nucleotide level (28).We recently described identification and characterization of the mrk genes encoding type 3 fimbriae in a uropathogenic strain of E. coli isolated from a patient with a nosocomial catheter-associated urinary tract infection (CAUTI) (29). The mrk genes were located on a conjugative plasmid (pMAS2027) and were strongly associated with biofilm formation. In this study we determined the entire sequence of plasmid pMAS2027 and revealed the presence of conjugative transfer genes homologous to the pilX1 to pilX11 genes of E. coli R6K (in addition to the mrk genes). We show here that biofilm formation is driven primarily by type 3 fimbriae and that the T4S apparatus is unable to mediate biofilm growth in the absence of the mrk genes. Finally, we demonstrate that conjugative transfer of pMAS2027 within a mixed biofilm confers biofilm formation properties on recipient cells due to acquisition of the type 3 fimbria-encoding mrk genes.  相似文献   

10.
Since enterohemorrhagic Escherichia coli (EHEC) isolates of serogroup O156 have been obtained from human diarrhea patients and asymptomatic carriers, we studied cattle as a potential reservoir for these bacteria. E. coli isolates serotyped by agglutination as O156:H25/H−/Hnt strains (n = 32) were isolated from three cattle farms during a period of 21 months and characterized by rapid microarray-based genotyping. The serotyping by agglutination of the O156 isolates was not confirmed in some cases by the results of DNA-based serotyping as only 25 of the 32 isolates were conclusively identified as O156:H25. In the multilocus sequence typing (MLST) analysis, all EHEC O156:H25 isolates were characterized as sequence type 300 (ST300) and ST688, which differ by a single-nucleotide exchange in the purA gene. Oligonucleotide microarrays allow simultaneous detection of a wider range of EHEC-associated and other E. coli virulence markers than other methods. All O156:H25 isolates showed a wide spectrum of virulence factors typical for EHEC. The stx1 genes combined with the EHEC hlyA (hlyAEHEC) gene, the eae gene of the ζ subtype, as well as numerous other virulence markers were present in all EHEC O156:H25 strains. The behavior of eight different cluster groups, including four that were EHEC O156:H25, was monitored in space and time. Variations in the O156 cluster groups were detected. The results of the cluster analysis suggest that some O156:H25 strains had the genetic potential for a long persistence in the host and on the farm, while other strains did not. As judged by their pattern of virulence markers, E. coli O156:H25 isolates of bovine origin may represent a considerable risk for human infection. Our results showed that the miniaturized E. coli oligonucleotide arrays are an excellent tool for the rapid detection of a large number of virulence markers.Shiga toxin-producing Escherichia coli (STEC) strains comprise a group of zoonotic enteric pathogens (45). In humans, infections with some STEC serotypes may result in hemorrhagic or nonhemorrhagic diarrhea, which can be complicated by the hemolytic uremic syndrome (HUS) (32). These STEC strains are also designated enterohemorrhagic Escherichia coli (EHEC). Consequently, EHEC strains represent a subgroup of STEC with high pathogenic potential for humans. Although E. coli O157:H7 is the most frequent EHEC serotype implicated in HUS, other serotypes can also cause this complication. Non-O157:H7 EHEC strains including serotypes O26:H11/H−, O103:H2/H−, O111:H8/H10/H−, and O145:H28/H25/H− and sorbitol-fermenting E. coli O157:H− isolates are present in about 50% of stool cultures from German HUS patients (10, 42). However, STEC strains that cause human infection belong to a large number of E. coli serotypes, although a small number of STEC isolates of serogroup O156 were associated with human disease (7). Strains of the serotypes O156:H1/H8/H21/H25 were found in human cases of diarrhea or asymptomatic infections (9, 22, 25, 26). The detection of STEC of serogroup O156 from healthy and diseased ruminants such as cattle, sheep, and goats was reported by several authors (1, 11-13, 21, 39, 46, 50, 52). Additional EHEC-associated virulence genes such as stx, eae, hlyAEHEC, or nlaA were found preferentially in the serotypes O156:H25 and O156:H− (11-13, 21, 22, 50, 52).Numerous methods exist for the detection of pathogenic E. coli, including genotypic and phenotypic marker assays for the detection of virulence genes and their products (19, 47, 55, 57). All of these methods have the common drawback of screening a relatively small number of determinants simultaneously. A diagnostic DNA microarray based on the ArrayTube format of CLONDIAG GmbH was developed as a viable alternative due to its ability to screen multiple virulence markers simultaneously (2). Further microarray layouts working with the same principle but different gene targets were developed for the rapid identification of antimicrobial resistance genes in Gram-negative bacteria (5) and for the rapid DNA-based serotyping of E. coli (4). In addition, a protein microarray for E. coli O serotyping based on the ArrayTube format was described by Anjum et al. (3).The aim of our study was the molecular genotyping of bovine E. coli field isolates of serogroup O156 based on miniaturized E. coli oligonucleotide arrays in the ArrayStrip format and to combine the screening of E. coli virulence markers, antimicrobial resistance genes, and DNA serotyping targets, some of which were partially described previously for separate arrays (2, 4, 5). The epidemiological situation in the beef herds from which the isolates were obtained and the spatial and temporal behavior of the clonal distribution of E. coli serogroup O156 were analyzed during the observation period. The potential risk of the isolates inducing disease in humans was assessed.  相似文献   

11.
12.
Existing methods for detection of food-borne pathogens and their toxins are frequently time-consuming, require specialized equipment, and involve lengthy culture procedures and/or animal testing and are thus unsuitable for a rapid response to an emergency public health situation. A series of simple and rapid affinity immunochromatography column (AICC) assays were developed to detect Clostridium botulinum neurotoxin types A, B, E, and F and Escherichia coli O157 in food matrices. Specifically, for milk, grape juice with peach juice, and bottled water, the detection limit for the botulinum neurotoxin type A complex was 0.5 ng. Use of this method with a 10-ml sample would therefore result in a detection limit of 50 pg ml−l. Thus, this assay is approximately 2 orders of magnitude more sensitive than a comparable lateral-flow assay. For botulinum neurotoxin complex types B, E, and F, the minimum detection limit was 5 ng to 50 ng. Sensitive detection of E. coli O157 was achieved, and the detection limit was 500 cells. The AICC test was also shown to be specific, rapid, and user friendly. This test takes only 15 to 30 min to complete without any specialized equipment and thus is suitable for use in the field. It has the potential to replace existing methods for presumptive detection of botulinum neurotoxin types A, B, E, and F and E. coli O157 in contaminated matrices without a requirement for preenrichment.The majority of conventional methods used for detection and identification of pathogenic microorganisms, viruses, and/or their toxins lack the speed and sensitivity necessary for use in the field (they typically are not completed in a single day) and also require specialized equipment (20). Rapid methods, including antibody-based and nucleic acid-based assays, have revolutionized the methodology for detection of microbial pathogens and their toxins in foods (16). However, while most antibody-based and nucleic acid-based assays are rapid, specialized equipment is often required, and specific enrichment is needed to achieve the necessary sensitivity. This means that the analysis time can still be several days (16). Lateral-flow assays (LFAs) and column flow assays are tests that have considerable merit in terms of rapidity and ease of use in the field without specialized equipment (4, 5, 8, 19, 34).Two contrasting agents were used as detection targets in this study: (i) a potent microbial toxin (Clostridium botulinum neurotoxin), including type A, B, E, and F neurotoxins; and (ii) an infectious pathogen, Escherichia coli O157. These two targets present different problems for detection; the first target is a protein toxin, and the second target is intact bacterial cells. The botulinum neurotoxin is the most potent toxin known, and as little as 30 to 100 ng has the potential to be fatal to humans (28). It is responsible for botulism, a severe neuroparalytic disease that affects humans and also animals and birds (28). There are seven antigenically distinct botulinum neurotoxins (types A to G), and a number of subtypes have also been described (9, 11, 15, 28, 36). Botulism in humans is associated principally with neurotoxin types A, B, E, and F (27, 29). Since the botulinum neurotoxins are the toxic agents and they can be produced by six physiologically distinct clostridia (28), considerable emphasis has been placed on detection of the neurotoxins rather than the bacteria. The “gold standard” method for detecting botulinum neurotoxins is the mouse bioassay due to its high levels of sensitivity and specificity. However, this technique is also problematic (33). It typically requires 24 to 48 h to yield results, is expensive, and is becoming less favored because of its use of animals (4). The alternative tests include enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays (ELISAs), lateral-flow assays (LFAs), a chemiluminescent slot blot immunoassay, surface plasmon resonance (SPR), the assay with a large immunosorbent surface area (ALISSA) test, and quantum dot immunoassays (4, 5, 7, 22, 43, 46). Lateral-flow assays are available and are convenient for toxin testing as they are easy to perform and rapid (<30 min) and no additional equipment is required. However, their poor sensitivity has limited their use (23).E. coli O157 produces a cytotoxin (verotoxin), and an E. coli O157 infection can lead to severe bloody diarrhea, kidney failure, brain damage, and death. Enumeration, identification, and control of this pathogen are challenging due to the low infectious dose necessary to cause disease, which is between 2 and 2,000 ingested cells (41). Sources of E. coli O157 infection include ground beef and unpasteurized milk and apple juice (1), raw milk (6), and spinach and lettuce (42). Isolation of E. coli O157:H7 from water, food, and environmental samples is laborious. Culture is difficult due to the large competing microflora that either overgrows or mimics the non-sorbitol-fermenting organism E. coli O157:H7 (12). According to Tokarskyy and Marshall (41), the largest group of rapid test kits commercially available for testing for the presence of E. coli O157 in food includes immunological methods, such as latex agglutination, reverse passive latex agglutination, immunodiffusion, ELISA, immunomagnetic separation (IMS), and immunoprecipitation. The other methods that have been developed include a dipstick test device (2), a lateral-flow immunoassay (8), real-time PCR (39), and an enzyme-linked immunomagnetic chemiluminescent assay (17). However, in many cases these tests require preenrichment or have limited sensitivity.The objective of the work described here was to develop a rapid sensitive diagnostic test for detection of botulinum neurotoxins A, B, E, and F and E. coli O157 that can be used without preenrichment.  相似文献   

13.
FimH, the adhesive subunit of type 1 fimbriae expressed by many enterobacteria, mediates mannose-sensitive binding to target host cells. At the same time, fine receptor-structural specificities of FimH from different species can be substantially different, affecting bacterial tissue tropism and, as a result, the role of the particular fimbriae in pathogenesis. In this study, we compared functional properties of the FimH proteins from Escherichia coli and Klebsiella pneumoniae, which are both 279 amino acids in length but differ by some ∼15% of residues. We show that K. pneumoniae FimH is unable to mediate adhesion in a monomannose-specific manner via terminally exposed Manα(1-2) residues in N-linked oligosaccharides, which are the structural basis of the tropism of E. coli FimH for uroepithelial cells. However, K. pneumoniae FimH can bind to the terminally exposed Manα(1-3)Manβ(1-4)GlcNAcβ1 trisaccharide, though only in a shear-dependent manner, wherein the binding is marginal at low shear force but enhanced sevenfold under increased shear. A single mutation in the K. pneumoniae FimH, S62A, converts the mode of binding from shear dependent to shear independent. This mutation has occurred naturally in the course of endemic circulation of a nosocomial uropathogenic clone and is identical to a pathogenicity-adaptive mutation found in highly virulent uropathogenic strains of E. coli, in which it also eliminates the dependence of E. coli binding on shear. The shear-dependent binding properties of the K. pneumoniae and E. coli FimH proteins are mediated via an allosteric catch bond mechanism. Thus, despite differences in FimH structure and fine receptor specificity, the shear-dependent nature of FimH-mediated adhesion is highly conserved between bacterial species, supporting its remarkable physiological significance.The most common type of adhesive organelle in the Enterobacteriaceae is the type 1 fimbria, which has been most extensively studied in Escherichia coli. The corresponding structures of Klebsiella pneumoniae are similar to those of E. coli with regard to genetic composition and regulation (15). Type 1 fimbriae are composed primarily of the structural subunit FimA, with minor amounts of three ancillary subunits, FimF, FimG, and the mannose-specific adhesin FimH. The FimH adhesin is an allosteric protein that mediates the catch bond mechanism of adhesion where the binding is increased under increased shear stress (48).It has been demonstrated in E. coli that FimH has two domains, the mannose-binding lectin domain (from amino acid [aa] 1 through 156) and the fimbria-incorporating pilin domain (from aa 160 through 279), connected via a 3-aa-long linker chain (6). A mannose-binding site is located at the top of the lectin domain, at the opposite end from the interdomain linker (17).Several studies have demonstrated that type 1 fimbriae play an important role in E. coli urinary tract infection (UTI) (7, 21, 23, 35). In addition, in urinary E. coli isolates, the FimH adhesin accumulates amino acid replacements which increase tropism for the uroepithelium and various components of basement membranes (21, 30, 35, 37, 49). Most of the replacements increase the monomannose binding capability of FimH under low shear, by altering allosteric catch bond properties of the protein (48). The mutated FimH variants were shown to provide an advantage in colonization of the urinary tract in the mouse model (35) and correlate with the overall extraintestinal virulence of E. coli (16). Thus, FimH mutations are pathoadaptive in nature.Klebsiella pneumoniae is recognized as an important opportunistic pathogen frequently causing UTIs, septicemia, or pneumonia in immunocompromised individuals (29). It is responsible for up to 10% of all nosocomial bacterial infections (18, 41). K. pneumoniae is ubiquitous in nature, and it has been shown that environmental isolates are phenotypically indistinguishable from clinical isolates (22, 26, 27, 29, 33). Furthermore, it has been demonstrated that environmental isolates of K. pneumoniae are as virulent as clinical isolates (28, 45).K. pneumoniae possesses a number of known virulence factors, including a pronounced capsule, type 3 fimbriae, and type 1 fimbriae (29, 44). Type 1 fimbriae produced by K. pneumoniae are described as functionally and structurally similar to type 1 fimbriae from E. coli (25) and have been shown to play a significant role in K. pneumoniae UTI (32, 43).We have previously shown that mature FimH from 54 isolates of K. pneumoniae (isolated from urine, blood, liver, and the environment) is represented by seven protein variants due to point amino acid replacements. (42) When K. pneumoniae FimH was aligned with the FimH of E. coli, they showed ∼85% similarity at the amino acid level. Furthermore, a majority (14 out of 21 isolates) of the K. pneumoniae strains isolated from patients with UTI grouped into a single clonal group based on multilocus sequence typing, but fimH in one isolate in the group differed from the others by a single nucleotide mutation resulting in an amino acid change, serine to alanine, in position 62 (42). The same mutation has been found in FimH of a highly uropathogenic clone of E. coli and significantly increases the adhesin''s ability to adhere to monomannose under low or no shear (19, 39, 50).In this study, we describe the extent and pattern of structural variability of the FimH protein from K. pneumoniae and perform comparative analyses of the functional properties of FimH from both K. pneumonae and E. coli.  相似文献   

14.
15.
Enteropathogen contamination of groundwater, including potable water sources, is a global concern. The spreading on land of animal slurries and manures, which can contain a broad range of pathogenic microorganisms, is considered a major contributor to this contamination. Some of the pathogenic microorganisms applied to soil have been observed to leach through the soil into groundwater, which poses a risk to public health. There is a critical need, therefore, for characterization of pathogen movement through the vadose zone for assessment of the risk to groundwater quality due to agricultural activities. A lysimeter experiment was performed to investigate the effect of soil type and condition on the fate and transport of potential bacterial pathogens, using Escherichia coli as a marker, in four Irish soils (n = 9). Cattle slurry (34 tonnes per ha) was spread on intact soil monoliths (depth, 1 m; diameter, 0.6 m) in the spring and summer. No effect of treatment or the initial soil moisture on the E. coli that leached from the soil was observed. Leaching of E. coli was observed predominantly from one soil type (average, 1.11 ± 0.77 CFU ml−1), a poorly drained Luvic Stagnosol, under natural rainfall conditions, and preferential flow was an important transport mechanism. E. coli was found to have persisted in control soils for more than 9 years, indicating that autochthonous E. coli populations are capable of becoming naturalized in the low-temperature environments of temperate maritime soils and that they can move through soil. This may compromise the use of E. coli as an indicator of fecal pollution of waters in these regions.The contamination of groundwater, including potable water supplies, with microbial pathogens continues to be a global concern (52, 59). Of particular importance in developed countries are the high levels of contamination associated with small-scale and very-small-scale drinking water supplies (5, 19, 57), often groundwater, which serve an estimated 10% of the total population in the European Union (13). The high numbers of these water supplies found to be contaminated with fecal bacteria and thus considered to be unfit for human consumption are worrying because the water from them is often untreated or inadequately treated prior to consumption. Microbial pathogens are known to survive for considerable periods of time in groundwater (29), which increases the health risk due to utilization of contaminated supplies. There are various sources of contamination, but evidence suggests that contamination from the spreading of animal slurries and manures on land can be a significant contributor (3, 33, 53). Spreading of agricultural slurries and manures on land is used by the agricultural sector as a means of nutrient recycling. The health risks associated with the spreading of animal and human wastes containing enteric pathogens have been recognized for a long time (10, 18). Animal manure and wastewaters may contain a broad range of pathogenic microorganisms, including Escherichia coli O157:H7, Campylobacter, Cryptosporidium, Salmonella spp., and pathogenic viruses, which are released into the environment during spreading (15, 22, 55). The levels and incidence of pathogens present in animal manures and slurries are influenced by a number of factors, including herd health, age demographics, stress factors, diet, season, and manure management and storage (37, 39).Soils (and subsoils) often act as a zone for mitigating microbial contamination of groundwater associated with the spreading of animal slurries and manures on land. Some of the pathogenic microorganisms applied to agricultural soils have, however, been observed to leach through the soil into groundwater, which can affect drinking water quality and pose a risk to public health (16, 26, 28, 42, 50), confirming that soil is not always a sufficient obstruction for protection of groundwater (16, 53). Consequently, characterization of the movement of pathogens through the unsaturated soil and subsoil zone (vadose zone) has become critical for assessment of the risk to groundwater posed by agricultural activities (8, 14, 42). The soil and subsoil type is believed to be a major factor influencing the potential transfer of pathogens through soil to groundwater (3, 34, 41, 50). The preapplication moisture status of a soil, which may be influenced by the season, also impacts pathogen survival, fate, and transport (2, 11, 43, 54).E. coli is widely used as an indicator of fecal contamination of water, and certain strains are known to be pathogenic (12). Thus, characterizing this organism''s transport through soil is important because of the health risk posed by the organism itself and with regard to its validity as an indicator of the fate of enteropathogens in the environment. E. coli strains have diverse properties and capabilities that affect their survival and transport in soils (9, 36, 56, 60). Consequently, data obtained by using total E. coli rather than individual surrogate strains can be more representative of the fate and transport of E. coli present in animal slurries. E. coli O157 die-off in soils has been reported to be the same as or quicker than total E. coli die-off, suggesting that data for total E. coli provide a conservative estimate of the survival potential (38, 56). Although many field and laboratory studies have investigated E. coli transport through soil columns (4, 6, 16, 43, 46, 47, 50, 51), most studies have investigated transport through soil to a depth of less than 30 cm. For assessment of the risk of transport to groundwater, such studies may not take into account the variation in soil physical and chemical characteristics with depth (e.g., the frequency and continuity of macropores, organic matter, and moisture contents) that affect bacterial transport. Furthermore, rainfall was often simulated in previous studies, which allows experimental conditions to be controlled but may not be representative of the risk due to variable natural rainfall events over time. In this study, we used intact soil monoliths that were 1 m deep to assess the risk of leaching of total E. coli in four representative Irish soil types under natural rainfall and environmental conditions.The objective of this study was to quantitatively investigate the impact of soil type and season (soil moisture content) on the fate and transport of E. coli spread on four different temperate maritime soil types under natural rainfall conditions. We hypothesized that there would be a greater microbial risk to underlying groundwater with better-drained soil types than with relatively poorly drained soil types following the application of animal slurry. In addition, we hypothesized that E. coli cells spread on wetter spring soils would be transported in greater numbers than E. coli cells spread on drier soils in the summer.  相似文献   

16.
The nanATEK-yhcH, yjhATS, and yjhBC operons in Escherichia coli are coregulated by environmental N-acetylneuraminic acid, the most prevalent sialic acid in nature. Here we show that YjhS (NanS) is a probable 9-O-acetyl N-acetylneuraminic acid esterase required for E. coli to grow on this alternative sialic acid, which is commonly found in mammalian host mucosal sites.The coregulated nanATEK-yhcH, yjhATS, and yjhBC operons involved in sialic acid catabolism in Escherichia coli are thought to be induced by the most common sialic acid, N-acetylneuraminic acid (Neu5Ac), through reversible inactivation of the NanR repressor encoded by nanR mapping immediately upstream of nanA (15, 27, 28; http://vetmed.illinois.edu/path/sialobiology/). Sialic acids are a family of over 40 naturally occurring 9-carbon keto sugar acids found mainly in metazoans of the deuterostome (starfish to human) developmental lineage and in some, mostly pathogenic, bacteria, where sialic acids expressed at the microbial cell surface inhibit host innate immunity (27). By contrast, most bacterial commensals and pathogens catabolize sialic acids as sole carbon and nitrogen sources, indicating exploitation of the sialic acid-rich host mucosal environment by a wide range of species (2, 27, 28). Interestingly, in vivo experimental evidence further indicates that sialic acid catabolism functions directly (nutrition) or indirectly (surface decoration and cell signaling) in host-microbe commensal and pathogenic interactions in organisms such as E. coli, Haemophilus influenzae, Pasteurella multocida, Salmonella enterica serovar Typhi, Streptococcus pneumoniae, Vibrio vulnificus, and Vibrio cholerae (1, 3, 5, 6, 10, 14, 23, 24, 26, 29). The animal species used for these studies include rodent models and natural hosts such as cattle and turkeys. The structural diversity of sialic acids at the terminal positions on glycoconjugates (glycoproteins and glycolipids) of mucosal surfaces of these hosts requires sialidases, acetyl esterases, and probably other enzymes that convert alternative or at least minor sialic acids to the more digestible Neu5Ac form (8, 9). We have previously demonstrated that E. coli has an epicurean propensity for metabolizing alternative sialic acids (30, 31). In the current communication, we show that YjhS is required for growth of E. coli on 9-O-acetyl-N-acetylneuraminic acid (Neu5,9Ac2).Because most sialic acids are bound to other sugars, including other sialic acids, as part of the oligosaccharide chains on glycoconjugates, either microbial or endogenous (host) sialidases (NanH, or N-acylneuraminate hydrolases) are needed to release free sugar, which is then transported by NanT in E. coli (15, 16, 26, 31). Once internalized, sialic acid is cleaved by an nanA-encoded aldolase or lyase to yield the 6-carbon hexosamine, N-acetylmannosamine (ManNAc), and pyruvate, with the latter entering the tricarboxylic acid cycle or gluconeogenesis. ManNAc is converted to its 6-phosphate derivative by a specific kinase encoded by nanK and epimerized by NanE to yield N-acetylglucosamine 6-phosphate, which is converted to fructose 6-phosphate by products of the nag operon (15, 17, 31, 32). The functions of the coregulated yjhS, yjhB, yjhC, and yhcH gene products are unknown but are not required for growth on Neu5Ac (15). However, YjhA (NanC) is an outer membrane porin required for diffusion of Neu5Ac in the absence of the major porins (7), while YjhT (NanM) is a mutarotase that catalyzes the conversion of the alpha sialic acid isomer to the more thermodynamically stable beta form (21). Neither nanC nor nanM is required for growth on Neu5Ac (15), suggesting that yjhS, yjhBC, and yhcH are involved in reactions that convert alternative sialic acids to Neu5Ac (22, 23). YhcH was crystallized and has been suggested to be an isomerase or epimerase involved in processing N-glycolylneuraminic acid (Neu5Gc) (25), but deletion of yhcH did not affect growth on this sialic acid as a sole carbon source (16).Computer-assisted analysis indicated that YjhB is a permease similar to NanT (16) whereas YjhC is a likely oxidoreductase or dehydrogenase. Orthologs of yhcH, nanC, nanM, and yjhBC are found in most bacterial species with intact Neu5Ac utilization systems, while yjhS is confined to E. coli and shigellae, either as part of the chromosomes in these strains or integrated with phages or phage remnants. However, a significant match (E value = 0.0007) was found between YjhS and AxeA in Rhodopirellula baltica, where AxeA is an acetyl xylan esterase (11), suggesting YjhS might be a sialate esterase. We propose that YjhS should be designated NanS to indicate its direct participation in utilization of an alternative sialic acid.  相似文献   

17.
18.
Bioreactor cultures of Escherichia coli recombinants carrying phaBAC and phaP of Azotobacter sp. FA8 grown on glycerol under low-agitation conditions accumulated more poly(3-hydroxybutyrate) (PHB) and ethanol than at high agitation, while in glucose cultures, low agitation led to a decrease in PHB formation. Cells produced smaller amounts of acids from glycerol than from glucose. Glycerol batch cultures stirred at 125 rpm accumulated, in 24 h, 30.1% (wt/wt) PHB with a relative molecular mass of 1.9 MDa, close to that of PHB obtained using glucose.Polyhydroxyalkanoates (PHAs), accumulated as intracellular granules by many bacteria under unfavorable conditions (5, 8), are carbon and energy reserves and also act as electron sinks, enhancing the fitness of bacteria and contributing to redox balance (9, 11, 19). PHAs have thermoplastic properties, are totally biodegradable by microorganisms present in most environments, and can be produced from different renewable carbon sources (8).Poly(3-hydroxybutyrate) (PHB) is the best known PHA, and its accumulation in recombinant Escherichia coli from several carbon sources has been studied (1, 13). In the last few years, increasing production of biodiesel has caused a sharp fall in the cost of its main by-product, glycerol (22). Its use for microbial PHA synthesis has been analyzed for natural PHA producers, such as Methylobacterium rhodesianum, Cupriavidus necator (formerly called Ralstonia eutropha) (3), several Pseudomonas strains (22), the recently described bacterium Zobellella denitrificans (7), and a Bacillus sp. (18), among others. Glycerol has also been used for PHB synthesis in recombinant E. coli (12, 15). PHAs obtained from glycerol were reported to have a significantly lower molecular weight than polymer synthesized from other substrates, such as glucose or lactose (10, 23).Apart from the genes that catalyze polymer biosynthesis, natural PHA producers have several genes that are involved in granule formation and/or have regulatory functions, such as phasins, granule-associated proteins that have been shown to enhance polymer synthesis and the number and size of PHA granules (17, 24). The phasin PhaP has been shown to exert a beneficial effect on bacterial growth and PHB accumulation from glycerol in bioreactor cultures of strain K24KP, a recombinant E. coli that carries phaBAC and phaP of Azotobacter sp. FA8 (6).Because the redox state of the cells is known to affect the synthesis of PHB (1, 4, 14), the present study investigates the behavior of this recombinant strain under different aeration conditions, by using two substrates, glucose and glycerol, with different oxidation states.  相似文献   

19.
Enterotoxigenic Escherichia coli (ETEC) is the leading bacterial cause of diarrhea in the developing world, as well as the most common cause of traveler''s diarrhea. The main hallmarks of this type of bacteria are the expression of one or more enterotoxins and fimbriae used for attachment to host intestinal cells. Longus is a pilus produced by ETEC. These bacteria grown in pleuropneumonia-like organism (PPLO) broth at 37°C and in 5% CO2 produced longus, showing that the assembly and expression of the pili depend on growth conditions and composition of the medium. To explore the role of longus in the adherence to epithelial cells, quantitative and qualitative analyses were done, and similar levels of adherence were observed, with values of 111.44 × 104 CFU/ml in HT-29, 101.33 × 104 CFU/ml in Caco-2, and 107.11 × 104 CFU/ml in T84 cells. In addition, the E9034AΔlngA strain showed a significant reduction in longus adherence of 32% in HT-29, 22.28% in Caco-2, and 21.68% in T84 cells compared to the wild-type strain. In experiments performed with nonintestinal cells (HeLa and HEp-2 cells), significant differences were not observed in adherence between E9034A and derivative strains. Interestingly, the E9034A and E9034AΔlngA(pLngA) strains were 30 to 35% more adherent in intestinal cells than in nonintestinal cells. Twitching motility experiments were performed, showing that ETEC strains E9034A and E9034AΔlngA(pLngA) had the capacity to form spreading zones while ETEC E9034AΔlngA does not. In addition, our data suggest that longus from ETEC participates in the colonization of human colonic cells.Enterotoxigenic Escherichia coli (ETEC) is an important cause of infant diarrhea in developing countries, a leading cause of traveler''s diarrhea, and a reemergent diarrheal pathogen in the United States (1, 25, 29, 33, 38, 40, 41, 44, 51, 52, 55). ETEC strains were first recognized as a cause of diarrheal disease in animals, especially in piglets and calves, where the disease continues to cause lethal infection in newborn animals (3, 37). Studies of ETEC in piglets first elucidated the mechanisms of disease, including the presence of two plasmid-encoded enterotoxins. In humans, the clinical appearance of ETEC infection is identical to that of cholera, with severe dehydrating illness not commonly seen in adults (38, 46). DuPont et al. (12) subsequently showed that ETEC strains were able to cause diarrhea in adult volunteers. ETEC strains cause watery diarrhea similar to that caused by Vibrio cholerae through the action of two enterotoxins, the cholera-like heat-labile and heat-stable enterotoxins (LT and ST, respectively) (38). These strains may express an LT only, an ST only, or both LT and ST. To cause diarrhea, ETEC strains must first adhere to small bowel enterocytes, an event mediated by a variety of surface fimbrial appendages called colonization factor antigens (CFAs), coli surface antigens (CSs), and putative colonization factors (PCF) (22, 33, 38). Transmission electron microscopy (TEM) of ETEC strains typically reveals many peritrichously arranged fimbriae around the bacterium; often, multiple fimbrial morphologies can be visualized on the same bacterium (6, 19, 31, 38). ETEC strains also express the K99 fimbriae, which are pathogenic for calves, lambs, and pigs, whereas K88-expressing organisms are able to cause disease only in pigs (8). Human ETEC strains possess their own array of colonization fimbriae, the CFAs usually encoded in plasmids (10). Currently, more than 20 CFAs known in human ETEC infections have been described (17). The CFAs can be subdivided based on their morphological characteristics. Three major morphological varieties exist: rigid rods (CFA I), bundle-forming flexible rods (CFA III), and thin, flexible, wiry structures (CFA II and CFA IV) (7, 8, 26, 30, 49, 53, 54).A high proportion of human ETEC strains contain a plasmid-encoded type IV pilus (T4P) antigen (CS20) also called longus for its length (19, 21). Longus is a T4P composed of a repeating structural subunit called LngA of 22 kDa, and its N-terminal amino acid sequences shares similarities with the class B type IV pili. These pili include the CFA III pilin subunit CofA of ETEC, the toxin-coregulated pilin (TCP) of V. cholerae, and the bundle-forming pilin (BFP) found in enteropathogenic E. coli (EPEC) and in a small percentage in other Gram-negative pathogens (21, 23). The lngA gene, which encodes the longus pilus in ETEC strains, is widely distributed in different geographic regions such Bangladesh, Chile, Brazil, Egypt, and Mexico (23). Interestingly, the lngA gene has been observed in association with ETEC strain producers of LT and ST (23). Sequence analysis of the fimbrial genes provided insight into the evolutionary history of longus. It appears that the highly conserved nonstructural lngA genes evolved in a similar manner to that of housekeeping genes.Recently, another important adherence factor called E. coli common pilus (ECP) has been identified; it is composed of a 21-kDa pilin subunit whose amino acid sequence corresponds to the product of the yagZ (renamed ecpA) gene present in all E. coli genomes sequenced to date (47). ECP production was demonstrated in strains representing intestinal (enterohemorrhagic E. coli [EHEC], EPEC, and ETEC) and extraintestinal pathogenic E. coli as well as normal-flora E. coli.In this study we report that longus plays an important role in the adherence to colonic epithelial cells. In addition to mediating cell adherence, longus is also associated with other pathogenicity attributes exhibited by other Gram-negative pathogenic bacteria producing T4P, which can contribute in part to the virulence of ETEC.  相似文献   

20.
Forty-nine typical and atypical enteropathogenic Escherichia coli (EPEC) strains belonging to different serotypes and isolated from humans, pets (cats and dogs), farm animals (bovines, sheep, and rabbits), and wild animals (monkeys) were investigated for virulence markers and clonal similarity by pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE) and multilocus sequence typing (MLST). The virulence markers analyzed revealed that atypical EPEC strains isolated from animals have the potential to cause diarrhea in humans. A close clonal relationship between human and animal isolates was found by MLST and PFGE. These results indicate that these animals act as atypical EPEC reservoirs and may represent sources of infection for humans. Since humans also act as a reservoir of atypical EPEC strains, the cycle of mutual infection of atypical EPEC between animals and humans, mainly pets and their owners, cannot be ruled out since the transmission dynamics between the reservoirs are not yet clearly understood.Enteropathogenic Escherichia coli (EPEC) strains are among the major causes of infantile diarrhea in developing countries (71) and can be classified as typical and atypical, depending on the presence or absence of the E. coli adherence factor plasmid (pEAF), respectively (39).The pathogenesis of EPEC resides in the ability to cause the attaching and effacing (A/E) lesion in the gut mucosa of human or animal hosts, leading to diarrheal illness (40). The genes responsible for the A/E lesion formation are located in a chromosomal pathogenicity island of ∼35 kb, known as the locus of enterocyte effacement (LEE) (23, 47). LEE encodes an adhesin called intimin (38), its translocated receptor (Tir) (42), components of a type III secretion system (36), and effector molecules, named E. coli-secreted proteins (Esp proteins) (41). These virulence factors have a crucial role in A/E lesion formation, and their detection in EPEC strains is an indicator of their potential to produce these lesions (19, 56).Atypical EPEC strains have been associated with diarrhea outbreaks in developed countries (31, 73, 77) and with sporadic cases of diarrhea in developing and developed countries (1, 12, 26, 52, 55). At present, the prevalence of atypical EPEC is higher than that of typical EPEC in several countries (1, 12, 26, 52, 55, 65).Different from the situation in developed countries, where atypical EPEC outbreaks and sporadic infections are associated with children and adults, atypical EPEC infection in Brazil is mainly associated with children''s illnesses (32, 71).Typical EPEC strains are rarely isolated from animals, and humans are the major natural reservoir for these pathogens (14, 32, 53, 71). In contrast, atypical EPEC strains are present in both healthy and diseased animals (dog, monkey, cats, and bovines) and humans (4, 6, 18, 28, 71). Some studies have associated pets and farm and wild animals as reservoirs and infection sources of atypical EPEC strains for humans (32). However, these studies did not compare atypical EPEC strains isolated from humans and animals by gold-standard molecular methods like multilocus sequence typing (MLST) or pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE) (15, 35, 43, 53). For this reason, there are some doubts about whether atypical EPEC strains isolated from animals represent risks for human health and whether animals really play the role of reservoirs of atypical EPEC.The aim of this study was to compare atypical EPEC strains isolated from humans and different animals, including pets (cats and dogs), farm animals (bovines, ovines, and rabbits), and wild animals (monkeys), by molecular phylogenetic techniques to verify the role of animals as reservoirs of and sources of infection with atypical EPEC in humans.  相似文献   

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