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1.
Forty nine Campylobacter jejuni isolates from cattle feces collected from Alberta feedlots and 50 clinical C. jejuni isolates from people in Alberta were tested for the presence of 14 genes encoding putative virulence factors by PCR. These included genes implicated in adherence and colonization (flaC, cadF, docC, racR, jlpA, peb1, and dnaJ), invasion (virB11, ciaB, pldA, and iamA) and protection against harsh conditions (htrA, cbrA, and sodB). The genes examined were widely distributed in both the cattle fecal isolates and the human isolates. Of the isolates tested, 67% contained all of the genes except virB11. The cadF gene was found in 100% of the isolates tested. The presence or absence of virulence-associated genes was not associated with the ability of the organism to colonize birds. All of the C. jejuni isolates used to challenge birds were able to colonize the animals regardless of virulence gene profile. While some diversity in the profile of the occurrence of virulence-associated genes in C. jejuni exists, the distribution of these putative virulence-associated genes isolates from feedlot cattle feces and humans in Alberta was similar. In addition it was not possible to predict the ability of the selected isolates to colonize young chicks based on the presence of these genes coding for virulence determinants.  相似文献   

2.
A streptomycin resistant Campylobacter jejuni inoculated per os into two populations of Syrian hamsters (one endemically harboring C. jejuni, the other free of C. jejuni) established chronic colonization of the organism in both groups. Diet, steroid administration, age of hamsters or prior exposure to C. jejuni did not appreciably alter incidence of diarrhea or colonization of C. jejuni. The majority of hamsters sampled during the course of the experiment (1 to 22 weeks) shed streptomycin resistant C. jejuni in the feces. In four hamsters sampled at 14, 17, 19, and 22 weeks, post inoculation, streptomycin resistant C. jejuni were recovered in ileal, cecal, jejunal, duodenal and colonic contents (10(4) to 10(7) colony forming units/gram of intestinal content). The hamster appears to be a potentially useful model for the study of intestinal colonization of enteropathogenic C. jejuni. Hamsters shedding C. jejuni in their feces for extended periods of time should be considered a zoonotic threat to both pet owners and laboratory personnel.  相似文献   

3.
Humans are exposed to Campylobacter spp. in a range of sources via both food and environmental pathways. For this study, we explored the frequency and distribution of thermophilic Campylobacter spp. in a 10- by 10-km square rural area of Cheshire, United Kingdom. The area contains approximately 70, mainly dairy, farms and is used extensively for outdoor recreational activities. Campylobacter spp. were isolated from a range of environmental samples by use of a systematic sampling grid. Livestock (mainly cattle) and wildlife feces and environmental water and soil samples were cultured, and isolates were presumptively identified by standard techniques. These isolates were further characterized by PCR. Campylobacter jejuni was the most prevalent species in all animal samples, ranging from 11% in samples from nonavian wildlife to 36% in cattle feces, and was isolated from 15% of water samples. Campylobacter coli was commonly found in water (17%) and sheep (21%) samples, but rarely in other samples. Campylobacter lari was recovered from all sample types, with the exception of sheep feces, and was found in moderate numbers in birds (7%) and water (5%). Campylobacter hyointestinalis was only recovered from cattle (7%) and birds (1%). The spatial distribution and determinants of C. jejuni in cattle feces were examined by the use of model-based spatial statistics. The distribution was consistent with very localized within-farm or within-field transmission and showed little evidence of any larger-scale spatial dependence. We concluded that there is a potentially high risk of human exposure to Campylobacter spp., particularly C. jejuni, in the environment of our study area. The prevalence and likely risk posed by C. jejuni-positive cattle feces in the environment diminished as the fecal material aged. After we took into account the age of the fecal material, the absence or presence of rain, and the presence of bird feces, there was evidence of significant variation in the prevalence of C. jejuni-positive cattle feces between grazing fields but no evidence of spatial clustering beyond this resolution. The spatial pattern of C. jejuni is therefore consistent with that for an organism that is ubiquitous in areas contaminated with cattle feces, with a short-scale variation in infection intensity that cannot be explained solely by variations in the age of the fecal material. The observed pattern is not consistent with large-scale transmission attributable to watercourses, wildlife territories, or other geographical features that transcend field and farm boundaries.  相似文献   

4.
This study reports on the use of PCR to directly detect and distinguish Campylobacter species in bovine feces without enrichment. Inhibitors present in feces are a major obstacle to using PCR to detect microorganisms. The QIAamp DNA stool minikit was found to be an efficacious extraction method, as determined by the positive amplification of internal control DNA added to bovine feces before extraction. With nested or seminested multiplex PCR, Campylobacter coli, C. fetus, C. hyointestinalis, and C. jejuni were detected in all fecal samples inoculated at approximately 10(4) CFU g(-1), and 50 to 83% of the samples inoculated at approximately 10(3) CFU g(-1) were positive. At approximately 10(2) CFU g(-1), C. fetus, C. hyointestinalis, and C. jejuni (17 to 50% of the samples) but not C. coli were detected by PCR. From uninoculated bovine feces, a total of 198 arbitrarily selected isolates of Campylobacter were recovered on four commonly used isolation media incubated at three temperatures. The most frequently isolated taxa were C. jejuni (152 isolates) and C. lanienae (42 isolates), but isolates of C. fetus subsp. fetus, Arcobacter butzleri, and A. skirrowii also were recovered (相似文献   

5.
Campylobacter jejuni is the leading bacterial cause of gastroenteritis worldwide. The present study was undertaken to determine the forms of polysaccharide-related compounds (PRCs) produced by C. jejuni and the culture conditions influencing their production. Expression of polysaccharides by C. jejuni was influenced by culture medium composition and growth phase. In addition to the production of lipooligosaccharide and capsular polysaccharide, a previously undescribed polysaccharide, not related to capsular polysaccharide, was shown to occur in C. jejuni in batch liquid and chemostat cultures. Thus, a variety of PRCs are produced by C. jejuni, and this should be considered when growing the bacterium in vitro for pathogenesis studies.  相似文献   

6.
The prevalence of Campylobacter jejuni in commercial feedlot cattle was monitored throughout the feeding period by repeated bacteriologic culture of feces. Fecal pats (n = 10) in 20 feedlot pens were sampled at 2-weeks interval beginning at entry into the feedlot and continuing until slaughter. The least-squares mean C. jejuni prevalence increased from 1.6% at the first sampling to 61.3% at the final sampling just prior to slaughter. Diverse C. jejuni pulsed-field gel electrophoresis macrorestriction profiles (MRP) were identified among the cattle isolates, but five prevalent MRP and minor variants accounted for >80% of all typed isolates. Chlorination of the water supplied to the water troughs of half of the pens did not affect C. jejuni prevalence in the cattle. Overall, the least-squares mean C. jejuni prevalences were 45.6 and 43.6% in chlorinated and nonchlorinated feedlot pens, respectively. The results of this study demonstrate apparent transmission of C. jejuni among feedlot cattle during the feeding period, unaffected by water chlorination, resulting in a high prevalence of C. jejuni excretion by cattle approaching slaughter.  相似文献   

7.
A 5 year longitudinal study involving 187 commercially reared beagles from three suppliers was undertaken to determine prevalence and serotypes of Campylobacter jejuni and C. coli. Campylobacter jejuni or C. coli was isolated from the feces in 62 of 177 asymptomatic beagles and 8 of 10 dogs with diarrhea for an overall prevalence of 37%. A total of 36 isolates were serotyped on the basis of thermostable antigens with 20 antisera prepared against frequently occurring serotypes isolated from humans with campylobacter associated enteritis (15 C. jejuni, 5 C. coli serotypes). Of these isolates, 17 (47%) serotyped with antisera to 7 C. jejuni serotypes frequently isolated in human cases of enteric campylobacteriosis (serotypes 1, 4, 10, 16, 18, 19, 37). One C. coli reacted to antisera 24, 34, 37, one strain of C. coli to antisera type 37, and another C. coli to antisera type 34. All three C. coli belonged to serotypes frequently encountered in diarrheic human patients.  相似文献   

8.
Exposure of a nutrient agar medium to the combined action of fluorescent light and air produced toxic factors in the medium which affected the growth of Campylobacter jejuni . Sodium dithionite (5–10 mM), a powerful reducing agent, and catalase were effective in counteracting the injurious action of light and air. Among the quenchers of singlet oxygen tested, only histidine had a beneficial effect on the recovery of C. jejuni in the photo-oxidized medium, while the addition of superoxide dismutase, a hydroxyl radical scavenger such as cysteamine, or the free radical antioxidants tocopherol and butylated hydroxy toluene, did not increase the recovery rate of photochemically injured cells. Histidine (40 mM) and dithionite (5–10 mM) also assisted recovery of C. jejuni inoculated on nutrient agar stored in air in the dark. Cysteamine and dithionite were toxic to Campylobacter when added at concentrations of ≥10 mM and ≥ 20 mM, respectively. A high inoculum of C. jejuni could not be recovered in unsupplemented nutrient agar incubated in air but was recovered in atmospheres containing 17 or 21% oxygen plus 10% carbon dioxide. The addition of dithionite, catalase or histidine resulted in some colony formation on nutrient agar incubated in air. Among the scavengers tested, only dithionite was consistently able to maintain the viability of C. jejuni on nutrient agar stored in air for longer than 4 weeks. In view of the ability of catalase, dithionite and histidine to enhance the aerotolerance of C. jejuni , it is concluded that various oxygen species might be involved in the toxicity of high levels of oxygen.  相似文献   

9.
To determine the optimal conditions for isolation of Campylobacter jejuni from human fecal specimens, we compared incubation atmospheres that contained about 5, 10, and 15% oxygen with the 17% oxygen produced in candle jars and also compared incubation temperatures of 37 and 42 degrees C. At 42 degrees C, C. jejuni was isolated from all 16 specimens; however, colony sizes were larger when plates were incubated in 5 and 10% oxygen than in the other two atmospheres. At 37 degrees C some positive cultures were missed in 15% oxygen and in the candle jar. The largest colony sizes were obtained in 5% oxygen. For each atmospheric condition tested, the colonies were larger at 42 than at 37 degrees C. When incubation is done at 42 degrees C, use of a candle jar is adequate; however, at 37 degrees C candle jars should not be used for isolation of C. jejuni from human feces.  相似文献   

10.
Presented here is the first evidence that Campylobacter jejuni secrete proteins upon co-cultivation with host cells and in INT 407 cell-conditioned medium. A C. jejuni gene designated ciaB for Campylobacter invasion antigen B was identified, using a differential screening technique, which is required for this secretion process and the efficient entry of this bacterium into a host cell. The C. jejuni ciaB gene encodes a protein of 610 amino acids with a calculated molecular mass of 73 154 Da. The deduced amino acid sequence of the CiaB protein shares similarity with type III secreted proteins associated with the invasion of host cells from other more extensively characterized bacterial pathogens. In vitro binding and internalization assays revealed that the binding of C. jejuni ciaB null mutants was indistinguishable from that of the parental isolate, whereas a significant reduction was noted in internalization. Confocal microscopic examination of C. jejuni-infected cells revealed that CiaB was translocated into the cytoplasm of the host cells. Culturing C. jejuni with INT 407 cells or in INT 407-conditioned medium resulted in the secretion of at least eight proteins, ranging in size from 12.8 to 108 kDa, into the culture medium. C. jejuni ciaB null mutants were deficient in the secretion of all eight proteins, indicating that CiaB is required for the secretion process. The identification of the C. jejuni ciaB gene represents a significant advance in understanding the molecular mechanism of C. jejuni internalization and the pathogenesis of C. jejuni-mediated enteritis.  相似文献   

11.
Campylobacter species are fastidious to culture, and the ability to directly quantify biomass in microbiologically complex substrates using real-time quantitative (RTQ) PCR may enhance our understanding of their biology and facilitate the development of efficacious mitigation strategies. This study reports the use of nested RTQ-PCR to directly quantify Campylobacter jejuni and Campylobacter lanienae in cattle feces. For C. jejuni, the single-copy mapA gene was selected. For C. lanienae, the three-copy 16S rRNA gene was targeted. RTQ-PCR primers were tested alone or they were nested with species-specific primers, and amplification products were detected using the intercalating dye SYBR Green. Nesting did not increase the specificity or sensitivity of C. jejuni quantification, and the limit of quantification was 19 to 25 genome copies ( approximately 3 x 10(3) CFU/g of feces). In contrast, nested RTQ-PCR was necessary to confer specificity on C. lanienae by targeting the 16S rRNA gene. The limit of quantification was 1.8 genome copies ( approximately 250 CFU/g of feces), and there was no discernible difference between the two C. lanienae secondary primer sets evaluated. Detection and quantification of C. jejuni in naturally infested cattle feces by RTQ-PCR were comparable to the results of culture-based methods. In contrast, culturing did not detect C. lanienae in 6 of 10 fecal samples positive for the bacterium and substantially underestimated cell densities relative to nested RTQ-PCR. The results of this study illustrate that RTQ-PCR can be used to directly quantify campylobacters, including very fastidious species, in a microbiologically and chemically complex substrate. Furthermore, targeting of a multicopy universal gene provided highly sensitive quantification of C. lanienae, but nested RTQ-PCR was necessary to confer specificity. This method will facilitate subsequent studies to elucidate the impact of this group of bacteria within the gastrointestinal tracts of livestock and studies of the factors that influence colonization success and shedding.  相似文献   

12.
Campylobacter fetus subsp. jejuni was commonly present in the feces of unweaned calves (2 to 3 weeks old) and from two of four groups of sheep. One new season lamb (12 to 16 weeks old) carried the organism, but the bacteria were not isolated from cattle. With unweaned calves, the fractions of animals infected and carcasses contaminated were similar. Contamination of carcasses usually involved low densities of C. fetus subsp. jejuni (ca. 1 to 10/cm2), which were isolated from flank but not rump areas. The organism was recovered less frequently from chilled carcasses and deboned veal. Small numbers of C. fetus subsp. jejuni could be recovered from equipment during the processing of unweaned calves but not after routine cleaning.  相似文献   

13.
AIMS: The purpose of this study was to develop a food-based model system that resembles the environment that Campylobacter jejuni experiences on raw poultry products and use this model system to investigate growth and survival of the bacterium. METHODS AND RESULTS: Chicken juice was collected from frozen chickens and subsequently cleared by centrifugation and subjected to sterile filtration. At low temperatures (5 and 10 degrees C) C. jejuni NCTC11168 remained viable in chicken juice for a remarkably longer period of time than in the reference medium BHI. When exposed to heat stress (48 degrees C) C. jejuni NCTC11168 also showed increased viability in chicken juice compared with the reference medium. Furthermore, agar plates made with chicken juice supported growth of four clinical isolates of C. jejuni and a C. jejuni strain obtained from chicken at both 37 and 42 degrees C. CONCLUSIONS: Our work shows that minimal processed and sterilized chicken juice is an ideal environment for survival of C. jejuni and that it is useful as a food-based model system. SIGNIFICANCE AND IMPACT OF THE STUDY: The developed model system may contribute to the understanding of C. jejuni viability on poultry products and can be instrumental in the development of alternative preservation strategies.  相似文献   

14.
Exposure of a nutrient agar medium to the combined action of fluorescent light and air produced toxic factors in the medium which affected the growth of Campylobacter jejuni. Sodium dithionite (5-10 mM), a powerful reducing agent, and catalase were effective in counteracting the injurious action of light and air. Among the quenchers of singlet oxygen tested, only histidine had a beneficial effect on the recovery of C. jejuni in the photo-oxidized medium, while the addition of superoxide dismutase, a hydroxyl radical scavenger such as cysteamine, or the free radical antioxidants tocopherol and butylated hydroxy toluene, did not increase the recovery rate of photochemically injured cells. Histidine (40 mM) and dithionite (5-10 mM) also assisted recovery of C. jejuni inoculated on nutrient agar stored in air in the dark. Cysteamine and dithionite were toxic to Campylobacter when added at concentrations of greater than or equal to 10 mM and greater than or equal to 20 mM, respectively. A high inoculum of C. jejuni could not be recovered in unsupplemented nutrient agar incubated in air but was recovered in atmospheres containing 17 or 21% oxygen plus 10% carbon dioxide. The addition of dithionite, catalase or histidine resulted some colony formation on nutrient agar incubated in air. Among the scavengers tested, only dithionite was consistently able to maintain the viability of C. jejuni on nutrient agar stored in air for longer than 4 weeks. In view of the ability of catalase, dithionite and histidine to enhance the aerotolerance of C. jejuni, it is concluded that various oxygen species might be involved in the toxicity of high levels of oxygen.  相似文献   

15.
We attempted to shorten the required time for enrichment broth culture for the isolation of Campylobacter jejuni. Enrichment broths described by Doyle and Roman and Park and Stankiewicz and one developed during this study were compared for ability to isolate C. jejuni from raw chicken carcasses. Our medium was a modification of that of Doyle and Roman with the addition of filter-sterilized FBP (0.2% ferrous sulfate, 0.025% sodium metabisulfite, 0.05% sodium pyruvate), 0.1% sodium lauryl sulfate, and 0.075% agar. Initially, laboratory strains were employed in the development of this medium. Subsequently, an indigenous load of C. jejuni obtained from chickens was used to compare media. Isolation rate comparisons were as follows: direct plating, 40%; Doyle and Roman broth, 45% at 7 h and 61% at 16 h; Park and Stankiewicz broth, 53% at 7 h and 60% at 16 h; our broth, 48% at 7 h and 50% at 16 h. In addition to having the highest isolation rate, the enrichment broth of Doyle and Roman showed greatest selectivity. Our inoculation method of indigenous bacteria provided a controlled means for comparison of isolation procedures.  相似文献   

16.
Heat injury and repair in Campylobacter jejuni   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
A procedure for detecting and quantitating heat injury in Campylobacter jejuni was developed. Washed cells of C. jejuni A7455 were heated in potassium phosphate buffer (0.1 M, pH 7.3) at 46 degrees C. Samples were plated on brucella agar supplemented with Na2S2O3, FeSO4 X 7H2O, and sodium pyruvate and on a medium containing brilliant green, bile, Na2S2O3, FeSO4 X 7H2O, and sodium pyruvate. Colonies were counted after 5 days of incubation at 37 degrees C in an atmosphere containing 5% O2, 10% CO2, and 85% N2. After 45 min at 46 degrees C, there was virtually no killing and ca. two log cycles of injury. Cells grown at 42 degrees C were more susceptible to injury than cells grown at 37 degrees C. The addition to brucella agar supplemented with Na2S2O3, FeSO4 X 7H2O, and sodium pyruvate of three different antibiotic mixtures used in the isolation of C. jejuni from foods or clinical specimens did not prevent recovery of heat-injured C. jejuni. Cells lost 260 nm of absorbing materials during heat injury. The addition of 5% NaCl or 40% sucrose to the heating buffer prevented leakage but did not prevent injury. Of the additional salts, sugars, and amino acids tested for protection, only NH4Cl, KCl, and LiCl2 prevented injury. Heat-injured C. jejuni repaired (regained dye and bile tolerance) in brucella broth supplemented with Na2S2O3, FeSO4 X 7H2O, and sodium pyruvate within 4 h. Increasing the NaCl in this medium to 1.25% inhibited repair, and increasing it to 2% was lethal. Heat-injured C. jejuni will repair at 42 degrees C but not at 5 degrees C.  相似文献   

17.
Heat injury and repair in Campylobacter jejuni.   总被引:3,自引:2,他引:1       下载免费PDF全文
A procedure for detecting and quantitating heat injury in Campylobacter jejuni was developed. Washed cells of C. jejuni A7455 were heated in potassium phosphate buffer (0.1 M, pH 7.3) at 46 degrees C. Samples were plated on brucella agar supplemented with Na2S2O3, FeSO4 X 7H2O, and sodium pyruvate and on a medium containing brilliant green, bile, Na2S2O3, FeSO4 X 7H2O, and sodium pyruvate. Colonies were counted after 5 days of incubation at 37 degrees C in an atmosphere containing 5% O2, 10% CO2, and 85% N2. After 45 min at 46 degrees C, there was virtually no killing and ca. two log cycles of injury. Cells grown at 42 degrees C were more susceptible to injury than cells grown at 37 degrees C. The addition to brucella agar supplemented with Na2S2O3, FeSO4 X 7H2O, and sodium pyruvate of three different antibiotic mixtures used in the isolation of C. jejuni from foods or clinical specimens did not prevent recovery of heat-injured C. jejuni. Cells lost 260 nm of absorbing materials during heat injury. The addition of 5% NaCl or 40% sucrose to the heating buffer prevented leakage but did not prevent injury. Of the additional salts, sugars, and amino acids tested for protection, only NH4Cl, KCl, and LiCl2 prevented injury. Heat-injured C. jejuni repaired (regained dye and bile tolerance) in brucella broth supplemented with Na2S2O3, FeSO4 X 7H2O, and sodium pyruvate within 4 h. Increasing the NaCl in this medium to 1.25% inhibited repair, and increasing it to 2% was lethal. Heat-injured C. jejuni will repair at 42 degrees C but not at 5 degrees C.  相似文献   

18.
AIMS: The aim of the study was to measure the survival of 19 Campylobacter jejuni strains of different origins, including two reference strains, four poultry-derived isolates, nine human isolates and four water isolates, in sterilized drinking water. METHODS AND RESULTS: Pure cultures of 19 C. jejuni strains were inoculated in sterile drinking water and incubated at 4 degrees C for 64 days. Survival was determined by culturability on both selective (Karmali agar) and non-selective [Columbia blood agar (CBA)] media. Culturability was shown to be strain and origin-dependent. Campylobacter jejuni showed prolonged survival on a non-selective than on a selective medium. CONCLUSIONS: The origin of the strain is a determining factor for the survival of C. jejuni in drinking water at 4 degrees C. Poultry isolates showed a prolonged survival, which could be an indication that these strains could play an important role in the transmission of campylobacteriosis through water. In addition, culture conditions are an important factor for evaluating the survival of C. jejuni in drinking water at 4 degrees C. The non-selective agar (CBA) allowed growth of C. jejuni over a longer period of time than the selective agar (Karmali). Furthermore, an enrichment broth (Bolton) allowed the recovery of all 19 C. jejuni strains during the 64 days of incubation at 4 degrees C. SIGNIFICANCE AND IMPACT OF THE STUDY: This study highlighted differences in culturability depending on culture conditions and on strain origin.  相似文献   

19.
20.
A technique combining enrichment in Preston enrichment broth and direct filtration onto chocolate agar was used to isolate Campylobacter species from pigeon feces. Campylobacter jejuni was isolated from 106 of 200 samples tested; 105 strains were isolated by enrichment-filtration, and 84 strains were isolated by direct plating. Most of the strains grew after 48 h at 37 degrees C.  相似文献   

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