Literature DB >> 19110067

Structure and urovirulence characteristics of the fecal Escherichia coli population among healthy women.

Eva Moreno1, James R Johnson, Teresa Pérez, Guillem Prats, Michael A Kuskowski, Antonia Andreu.   

Abstract

The fecal Escherichia coli population structure may influence the occurrence and etiology of extraintestinal infection, but is poorly understood. Accordingly, fecal E. coli from 39 healthy women (30 putative colonies per subject) were characterized for clonal identity, urinary tract infection-associated virulence traits, and phylogenetic background. The 120 unique E. coli clones (mean, three per sample) were distributed by phylogenetic group as follows: A (33%), D (31%), B1 (19%), and B2 (17%). However, 36% of women carried > or =1 clone from group B2, and 87% had clones from groups B2 and/or D. Of the B2 clones, 90% were from pauciclonal fecal samples (< or =4 clones), compared with 47% and 52% of A and B1 clones (P=.001 and P=.007, respectively). Group B2 and D clones more often were dominant within the source sample than group A and B1 clones (60% vs. 41%: P=.05). Dominant clones exhibited higher virulence scores than non-dominant clones (mean 4.4 vs. 3.1: P=.015). In multilevel regression models, pauciclonal sample, B2, and clonal prevalence significantly predicted virulence score. In conclusion, within the intestinal E. coli population, virulence-associated traits, clonal prevalence, and low fecal clonal diversity are related. Virulence-associated traits of group B2/D E. coli may enhance fitness within the gut, thereby increasing strains' likelihood of causing extraintestinal infection.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 19110067     DOI: 10.1016/j.micinf.2008.12.002

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Microbes Infect        ISSN: 1286-4579            Impact factor:   2.700


  29 in total

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6.  Biological and physicochemical wastewater treatment processes reduce the prevalence of virulent Escherichia coli.

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8.  Escherichia coli Clonobiome: Assessing the Strain Diversity in Feces and Urine by Deep Amplicon Sequencing.

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10.  Adhesion of human and animal Escherichia coli strains in association with their virulence-associated genes and phylogenetic origins.

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Journal:  Appl Environ Microbiol       Date:  2013-07-19       Impact factor: 4.792

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