Investigation of domestic animals and pets as a reservoir for intimin-(eae) gene positive Escherichia coli types
2005
Krause, G. | Zimmermann, S. | Beutin, L.
German. Domestic animals belonging to seven different species (cattle, sheep, dogs, cats, pigs, chicken and goats) were investigated as natural reservoirs for attaching and effacing Escherichia coli (AEEC). For this, 2165 E. coli strains from faeces of 803 animals were examined for the presence of the intimin -(eae) gene as a characteristic of AEEC strains. Ten percent of the animals were found to excrete AEEC, most frequently found in sheep (19.2%) and pigs (17.6), followed by cattle (10.4%), dogs (7.2%), cats (6.5%) and poultry (2.3%). The 97 AEEC strains from animals were grouped into 44 serotypes. Only four E. coli serotypes (O2:H8, O26:[H11], O109:[H25] and O145:[H28] were found in more than one animal host species. AEEC O26:[H11] strains were most frequently isolated (13.4%) being present in cattle, poultry, pigs and sheep. A search for virulence markers associated with enterohemorrhagic E. coli (EHEC) revealed Shiga-toxin genes in three (3.1%) AEEC strains from sheep. Bundle forming pili genes as a trait of typical enteropathogenic E. coli (EPEC) were detected in four (4.1%) strains from dogs and cats. The remaining 90 AEEC strains were classified as atypical EPEC. Typing of intimin genes revealed intimin beta being present in 51.5% of the strains, followed by intimins theta (23.7%), epsilon (6.2%), kappa (5.2%), zeta (5.2%), alpha, mu and iota (each 1.0%). Our data indicate that domestic animals and pets constitute an important natural reservoir of A-EEC strains, and some of these (026: [H11], 0 103: H2, O128:H2, O145:[H28] and O177:[H11]) are known to occur as pathogens in humans. (c) 2004 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved
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Publisher Elsevier Science
ISSN 1873-2542 | 0378-1135This bibliographic record has been provided by German Federal Institute for Risk Assessment