| Literature DB >> 10596809 |
R E Holland1, R D Walker, N Sriranganathan, R A Wilson, D C Ruhl.
Abstract
Five month old dogs from a Midwestern research kennel occasionally developed bloody diarrhea after shipment to other facilities. As previous diagnostic efforts failed to reveal any potential pathogens in feces from normal and diarrheic dogs, Escherichia coli was investigated for select virulence properties that may contribute to the occurrence of bloody diarrhea. Fecal swabs from 52 healthy dogs were examined for E. coli. Two hundred and sixty E. coli-like colonies were screened by PCR for the attaching and effacing (eae) gene, Shiga toxin (stx) genes, and the heat-stable enterotoxin type A (sta) gene. One hundred forty two of the 260 E. coli-like colonies (54.6%) from 43 dogs were eae or sta positive; and 60 of the eae and/or sta positive isolates were examined further. Among the 60 isolates, 23 (38.3%) possessed the eae gene, 32 (53.3%) possessed the sta gene, and five (8.3%) possessed both eae and sta genes (eae+/sta+). Of the 60 isolates, six sta+ and one eae+/sta+ isolates were hemolytic. When examined in the suckling mouse assay, five of six sta+ isolates and three of four eae+/sta+ isolates gave gut-to-remaining carcass ratios > or =0.083, indicating expression of heat-stable enterotoxin. These enterotoxin-producing isolates belonged to serogroups O42, O170, and O-negative.Entities:
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Year: 1999 PMID: 10596809 DOI: 10.1016/s0378-1135(99)00136-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Vet Microbiol ISSN: 0378-1135 Impact factor: 3.293