Isolation from a sheep of an attaching and effacing Escherichia coli O115:H− with a novel combination of virulence factors
- 1 December 2002
- journal article
- Published by Microbiology Society in Journal of Medical Microbiology
- Vol. 51 (12) , 1041-1049
- https://doi.org/10.1099/0022-1317-51-12-1041
Abstract
Attaching and effacing (AE) lesions were observed in the caecum, proximal colon and rectum of one of four lambs experimentally inoculated at 6 weeks of age with Escherichia coli O157:H7. However, the attached bacteria did not immunostain with O157-specific antiserum. Subsequent bacteriological analysis of samples from this animal yielded two E. coli O115:H− strains, one from the colon (CO) and one from the rectum (RC), and those bacteria forming the AE lesions were shown to be of the O115 serogroup by immunostaining. The O115:H−isolates formed microcolonies and attaching and effacing lesions, as demonstrated by the fluorescence actin staining test, on HEp-2 tissue culture cells. Both isolates were confirmed by PCR to encode the epsilon (ε) subtype of intimin. Supernates of both O115:H− isolates induced cytopathic effects on Vero cell monolayers, and PCR analysis verified that both isolates encoded EAST1, CNF1 and CNF2 toxins but not Shiga-like toxins. Both isolates harboured similar sized plasmids but PCR analysis indicated that only one of the O115:H− isolates (CO) possessed the plasmid-associated virulence determinants ehxA and etpD. Neither strain possessed the espP, katP or bfpA plasmid-associated virulence determinants. These E. coli O115:H− strains exhibited a novel combination of virulence determinants and are the first isolates found to possess both CNF1 and CNF2.Keywords
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