Refine search
Results 11-20 of 33
Clostridium perfringens spores in Polish honey samples
2018
Grenda, Tomasz | Grabczak, Magdalena | Goldsztejn, Magdalena | Kozieł, Nina | Kwiatek, Krzysztof | Pohorecka, Krystyna | Skubida, Marta | Bober, Andrzej
The aim of this study was examination of honey samples collected from apiaries situated in all Polish provinces for occurrence of Clostridium spp., especially C. perfringens. The study was carried out on 240 honey samples (15 samples/province). Estimation of Clostridium titre, its cultures and C. perfringens isolate characterisation were performed according to the standard PN-R-64791:1994. A multiplex PCR method for detection of genes coding cpa (α toxin), cpb (β), cpb2 (β2), etx (ε), iap (ι), and cpe (enterotoxin) toxins was used. Clostridium spp. was noticed in 56% (136/240) of samples, and its titres ranged between 0.1 g and 0.001 g. Clostridium perfringens occurrence was evidenced in 27.5% (66/240) of samples. All isolates were classified to toxinotype A. Evidence of a high number of positive samples with occurrence of Clostridium spp. indicates a potential risk to consumers’ health. The infective number of Clostridium spp. is unknown; however, the obtained results have shown that a risk assessment on the entire honey harvesting process should be made in order to ensure microbiological safety. Moreover, a detailed study should be undertaken on the antibiotic resistance of C. perfringens isolates from honey samples.
Show more [+] Less [-]Enterotoxigenic, verotoxigenic, anda necrotoxigenic Escherichia coli isolated from cattle in Spain
1993
Blanco, M. | Blanco, J. | Blanco, J.E. | Ramos, J.
To assess the role of enterotoxigenic (ETEC), verotoxigenic (VTEC), and necrotoxigenic (NTEC) Escherichia coli in cattle with diarrhea, 1,524 colonies of E coli isolated from 197 calves with diarrhea and from 112 healthy controls were investigated for production of heat-labile and heat-stable enterotoxins, verotoxins, and cytotoxic necrotizing factors (CNF1 and CNF2). The ETEC were isolated from only 2 (1%) calves with diarrhea and from 5 (4%) healthy controls. In contrast, VTEC and NTEC that produced CNF2 were frequently identified. The VTEC were isolated from 18 (9%) calves with diarrhea and from 21 (19%) healthy cattle (P < 0.05), whereas NTEC that produced CNF2 were detected in 39 (20%) ill calves and in 38 (34%) controls (P < 0.01). Therefore, VTEC and NTEC that produced CNF2 were isolated significantly more frequently from healthy than diseased calves. Serogroups to which VTEC belonged differed considerably from the O groups involved with NTEC. Although, VTEC belonged to 18 serogroups, only 4 (O26, O103, O113, and O157) accounted for 56% (25 of 45) of verotoxigenic strains. The NTEC that produced CNF2 belonged to 26 serogroups; however, 64% (69 of 108) were from 6 serogroups (O1, O3, O15, O55, O88, and O123). Our results are compatible with cattle being a reservoir of VTEC that are pathogenic for human beings and with ETEC being an unusual cause of bovine colibacillosis in Galicia (northwestern Spain). Furthermore, results of this study indicate that VTEC and NTEC that produced CNF2 may be part of the normal intestinal flora of cattle.
Show more [+] Less [-]Intestinal responses to enterotoxigenic Escherichia coli heat-stable toxin b in non-porcine species
1991
Whipp, S.C.
The Escherichia coli heat-stable enterotoxin (STb) is the most prevalent toxin associated with diarrheagenic E coli isolates of porcine origin. Unequivocal biological activity of this toxin has been observed only in swine intestine. In this study, when endogenous protease activity was blocked with soybean trypsin inhibitor, intestinal secretion was stimulated by STb in jejunal loops of rats, mice, calves, and rabbits. Compared with pigs, rats, mice, and calves, rabbits were relatively insensitive to STb. These data demonstrate that the activity of STb is not a species-specific toxic activity; there is species variation in sensitivity to STb, and some common laboratory animals may have potential to be used to measure biological activity Of STb.
Show more [+] Less [-]In vitro effects of a mixture of Escherichia coli heat-stable enterotoxins on chloride flux in everted jejunal sacs of male pigs
1988
Panichkriangkrai, W. | Ahrens, F.A.
In vitro effects of a mixture of Escherichia coli heat-stable enterotoxins (STa and STb) on isolated jejunum of 3-week-old male pigs were studied, using everted intestinal sac techniques. Heat-stable enterotoxins increased chloride secretion and chloride absorption in everted intestinal sacs. The increase of secretory flux was greater than that for absorptive flux. Vasoactive intestinal peptide (6 x 10-9M) increased chloride secretion, but had no effect on chloride absorption. Neither vasoactive intestinal peptide nor pilocarpine (10-5M) had additive effect to ST. Secretory effects of ST were not blocked by atropine 2 x 10-5M), clonidine (10-6M), or morphine (4.2 X 10-6M).
Show more [+] Less [-]Prevalence of fimbrial antigens and enterotoxins in nonclassical serogroups of Escherichia coli isolated from newborn pigs with diarrhea
1988
Fairbrother, J.M. | Lariviere, S. | Johnson, W.M.
Ninety-nine nonclassical serogroups isolated from newborn pigs with neonatal diarrhea were tested for fimbrial antigens F4(K88), F5(K99), F6(987P), F41, and F165, and for heat-labile enterotoxin, heat-stable enterotoxin a (STa), heat-stable enterotoxin b, verocytotoxin, and cytolethal-distending toxin. Thirty-two strains, belonging mostly to serogroups O64:K"V142,", O9:K103, and O20:K101, were F5-positive and usually produced STa, although 5 strains produced only heat-stable enterotoxin b. Fifteen strains, belonging mostly to serogroups O64:K"V142" and O20:K101, were F41 positive and usually produced STa. Twenty-three strains belonging mostly to serogroups O64:K"V142," O9:K103, and O20:K101, were F6-positive and usually produced STa. Several strains produced more than one fimbrial antigen, either F5 and F41, F5 and F6, F6 and F41, F6 and F165, or F5, F6, F41, and F165. None of the strains produced heat-labile enterotoxin, verocytotoxin, or cytolethal-distending toxin. The indirect immunofluorescence test was much more sensitive than was the slide agglutination test for the detection of each of the fimbrial antigens F5, F6, F41, and F165 on strains grown in vitro. The production of F6 by certain strains for which only a low proportion of cells were F6-positive in vitro as demonstrated by immunofluorescence, was confirmed by experimental infection of newborn pigs.
Show more [+] Less [-]Risk of Staphylococcus aureus Isolated from Poultry Meat of Chicken with Arthritis in Poultry Farms
2023
Helmy A. Torky | Ayman. M. Kamar | Mahmoud M. Abotaleb | Rasha Gomaa Tawfik
Staphylococcus aureus is a major pathogen that affects both people and animals. Staphylococcus aureus causes food poisoning in addition to invasive diseases as arthritis and septicemia. This study was done on 70 chicken samples obtained from 7 different farms of chickens with symptoms of arthritis in Kafr El-sheikh government, Egypt. In this study out of 70 samples of chickens from different farms, 37 (52.8%) samples were recognized as coagulase-positive staphylococci (CoPS) and 33 (47.1%) were recognized as coagulase-negative staphylococci (CoNS). By using the microtitre plate method, seven out of 37 (18.9%) CoPS were positive for biofilm production with variable degrees. The pattern of antibacterial sensitivity of 7 Staphylococcus aureus isolates against 12 commercially available antibiotic discs showed 100 % resistance to oxytetracycline then Amoxicillin (71.43%), Erythromycin (57.14%), Norfloxacin (14.29%), Tetracycline (42.86), Sulphamethoxazole (42.86%), Gentamicin (42.86%), Ampicillin (42.86%), kanamycin (28.57), cephatotin (28.57), doxycycline (0%) and the least was observed with chloramphenicol (0%). seven of positive S. aureus isolates were introduced in order to identify the staphylococcal enterotoxin genes, SEA, SEB, SEC, SED, and SEE and integron by PCR test Which 4 out of 7 isolates (57.1 %) were positive for SEB and SED only while were other isolate were negative for all SE gene. Class 1 integron cassettes were detected in 6 isolates from 7 (85.7%) of tested isolates. In conclusion, this is the first study to report the detection and identification of enterotoxin and class 1 integron in S. aureus isolated from poultry meat of chicken that suffered from arthritis.
Show more [+] Less [-]Characterization of Clostridium perfringens in the feces of adult horses and foals with acute enterocolitis
2014
Gohari, I.M. | Arroyo, L. | Macinnes, J.I. | Timoney, J.F. | Parreira, V.R. | Prescott, J.F.
Up to 60% of cases of equine colitis have no known cause. To improve understanding of the causes of acute colitis in horses, we hypothesized that Clostridium perfringens producing enterotoxin (CPE) and/or beta2 toxin (CPB2) are common and important causes of severe colitis in horses and/or that C. perfringens producing an as-yet-undescribed cytotoxin may also cause colitis in horses. Fecal samples from 55 horses (43 adults, 12 foals) with clinical evidence of colitis were evaluated by culture for the presence of Clostridium difficile, C. perfringens, and Salmonella. Feces were also examined by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) for C. difficile A/B toxins and C. perfringens alpha toxin (CPA), beta2 toxin (CPB2), and enterotoxin (CPE). Five C. perfringens isolates per sample were genotyped for the following genes: cpa, cpb, cpb2 consensus, cpb2 atypical, cpe (enterotoxin), etx (epsilon toxin), itx (iota toxin), netB (necrotic enteritis toxin B), and tpeL (large C. perfringens cytotoxin). The supernatants of these isolates were also evaluated for toxicity for an equine cell line. All fecal samples were negative for Salmonella. Clostridium perfringens and C. difficile were isolated from 40% and 5.4% of samples, respectively. All fecal samples were negative for CPE. Clostridium perfringens CPA and CPB2 toxins were detected in 14.5% and 7.2% of fecal samples, respectively, all of which were culture-positive for C. perfringens. No isolates were cpe, etx, netB, or tpeL gene-positive. Atypical cpb2 and consensus cpb2 genes were identified in 15 (13.6%) and 4 (3.6%) of 110 isolates, respectively. All equine C. perfringens isolates showed far milder cytotoxicity effects than a CPB-producing positive control, although cpb2-positive isolates were slightly but significantly more cytotoxic than negative isolates. Based on this studied population, we were unable to confirm our hypothesis that CPE and CPB2-producing C. perfringens are common in horses with colitis in Ontario and we failed to identify cytotoxic activity in vitro in the type A isolates recovered.
Show more [+] Less [-]Association between the effacing (eae) gene and the Shiga-like toxin-encoding genes in Escherichia coli isolates from cattle
1993
Mainil, J.G. | Jacquemin, E.R. | Kaeckenbeeck, A.E. | Pohl, P.H.
Two hundred ninety-six Eschericbia coli isolates from feces or intestines of calves with diarrhea were hybridized with 7 gene probes. One probe (the eae probe) was derived from the eae gene coding for a protein involved in the effacement of the enterocyte microvilli by the group of bacteria called attaching and effacing E coli (AEEC), and 2 probes were derived from genes coding for the Shiga-like toxins (SLT) 1 and 2 produced by the verocytotoxic E coli (VTEC). The other 4 probes were derived from DNA sequences associated with the adhesive properties of enteroadherent E coli (EAEC) to cultured cells (the EAF probe for the localized adherence pattern, probes F1845 and AIDA-1 for the diffuse adherence pattern, and the Agg probe for the aggregative adherence pattern). Hybridization results for the eae probe were in agreement, for all but 1 of the 8 isolates, with previously published phenotypic results of microvilli effacement. The latter was previously reported as effacing the microvilli of calf enterocytes, but was eae probe-negative. Two classes of isolates hybridized with the eae probe. Members of a first class (60 isolates) additionally produced a positive signal with 1 or both of the SLT probes (VTEC-AEEC isolates). Isolates hy- bridizing with the eae and the SLT1 probes were the most frequent: 56 isolates (ie, 93% of all VTEC-AEEC). Members of the second class (10 isolates) failed to hybridize with either SLT probe (non-VTEC-AEEC isolates). Most isolates of these 2 classes belong to only 4 serogroups: O5, O26, O111, and O118. In addition to these 2 AEEC classes, a VTEC class (20 isolates) was observed. Such isolates were positive with 1 or both SLT probes, but were negative with the eae probe. All but 1 isolate belonged to serogroups not found among the AEEC isolates. Only 7 of all AEEC and VTEC isolates were positive with the EAF, the F1845, or the AIDA-1 probe, and none were positive with the Agg probe. On the other hand, 32 non-VTEC, non-AEEC isolates were positive with the F1845 probe only, 2 were positive with the EAF probe only, and 1 was positive with the AIDA-1 probe only, thus constituting a possible class of EAEC isolates from cattle. The eae gene and the gene coding for the SLT1 are, thus, associated in most AEEC isolates from cattle. The isolates with other hybridization results VTEC and EAEC isolates) need more work to be clearly defined.
Show more [+] Less [-]Myoelectric activity of the small intestine in enterotoxin-induced diarrhea of calves
1992
Roussel, A.J. | Woode, G.N. | Waldron, R.C. | Sriranganathan, N. | Jones, M.K.
Electrodes were surgically implanted at 15-cm intervals in the jejunum and ileum of 4 healthy neonatal calves so that myoelectric activity could be recorded on 2 consecutive days. On the first day, each calf received a control treatment, and myoelectric activity was recorded for 340 minutes. Phase I was recorded for a mean of 175.8 +/- 22.8 minutes (51.5%), phase II for 124 +/- 27.4 minutes (36.5%), and phase III for 40.3 +/- 6 minutes (11.9%). On the second day, each calf was treated with approximately 200 micrograms of heat-stable enterotoxin (STa) of Escherichia coli orally. All calves developed diarrhea after the administration of STa. Phase I was recorded for a mean of 92.5 +/- 42.3 minutes (27.2%), phase II for 227.3 +/- 52.5 minutes 66.9%), and phase III for 20.3 +/- 11.4 minutes (6.0%). Increase in phase II and decrease in phases I and III after STa administration were significant (P < 0.05). Duration of the migrating myoelectric complex was longer after STa administration (median, 64 minutes), compared with the control treatment (median, 54 minutes). Minute rhythms, recorded on the day of toxin administration, ranged from 49 to 153 minutes. There was no difference between the number of migrating action potential complexes on the control days (range, 1 to 10), compared with those on treatment days (range, 1 to 14). These findings are suggestive that enterotoxin-induced diarrhea of calves is accompanied by increased total spiking activity and minute rhythms in the distal portion of the jejunum and ileum.
Show more [+] Less [-]Flow cytofluorometric studies on the alteration of leukocyte populations in blood and milk during endotoxin-induced mastitis in cows
1990
Saad, A.M. | Ostensson, K.
Alterations in the various leukocyte populations in milk, blood, and mammary lymph were studied by use of the flow cytometric method during acute mastitis episodes induced by endotoxin infusion (50 microgram of lipopolysaccharide of Salmonella typhimurium SH 4809) via the teat canal. Lymph samples were collected via a semipermanent catheter from an afferent duct to the supramammary lymph node. Milk somatic cell count increased at 4 hours after infusion of endotoxin. Neutrophils were the predominant cell population for up to 59 hours after infusion. Numbers of lymphocytes and monocytes-macrophages in milk also increased after the endotoxin infusion. The total cell count in milk started to decrease during the third postinfusion day and returned to preinfusion values during the fourth day. Lymphocyte numbers remained high for about 1 week after the infusion, and lymphocytes were the predominant cell population between postinfusion days 4 and 8. Total blood leukocyte count decreased during the first 6 hours after infusion, followed by an increase until postinfusion hour 31. The proportion of neutrophils in blood increased during the first day, whereas that of lymphocytes decreased. Lymph flow rate and leukocyte numbers in lymph increased after endotoxin infusion. The proportion of neutrophils in the lymph increased during the first 6 hours, whereas that of lymphocytes decreased. After postinfusion hour 6, the inverse course of events was seen.
Show more [+] Less [-]