Shiga toxin-producing Escherichia coli (STEC)O157:H7 is a zoonotic pathogen of public health concern worldwide. To compare the local and large-scale geographic distributions of genotypes of STEC O157:H7 isolates obtained from various bovine and human sources during 2008–2011, we used pulsed-field gel electrophoresis and Shiga toxin–encoding bacteriophage insertion (SBI) typing. Using multivariate methods, we compared isolates from the North and South Islands of New Zealand with isolates from Australia and the United States. The STEC O157:H7 population structure differed substantially between the 2 islands and showed evidence of finer scale spatial structuring, which is consistent with highly localized transmission rather than disseminated foodborne outbreaks. The distribution of SBI types differed markedly among isolates from New Zealand, Australia, and the United States. Our findings also provide evidence for the historic introduction into New Zealand of a subset of globally circulating STEC O157:H7 strains that have continued to evolve and be transmitted locally between cattle and humans.
Shiga toxin-producing Escherichia coli (STEC)O157:H7 is a zoonotic pathogen of public health concern worldwide. To compare the local and large-scale geographic distributions of genotypes of STEC O157:H7 isolates obtained from various bovine and human sources during 2008–2011, we used pulsed-field gel electrophoresis and Shiga toxin–encoding bacteriophage insertion (SBI) typing. Using multivariate methods, we compared isolates from the North and South Islands of New Zealand with isolates from Australia and the United States. The STEC O157:H7 population structure differed substantially between the 2 islands and showed evidence of finer scale spatial structuring, which is consistent with highly localized transmission rather than disseminated foodborne outbreaks. The distribution of SBI types differed markedly among isolates from New Zealand, Australia, and the United States. Our findings also provide evidence for the historic introduction into New Zealand of a subset of globally circulating STEC O157:H7 strains that have continued to evolve and be transmitted locally between cattle and humans.
Shiga toxin–producing Escherichia coli (STEC) O157:H7 and related
non-O157 STEC strains are zoonotic pathogens that can cause severe gastrointestinal illness
in humans; clinical signs and symptoms of disease range from diarrhea and hemorrhagic
colitis to life-threatening hemolytic uremic syndrome (,).
Ruminants, asymptomatic carriers of STEC, shed the pathogen in their feces, and are
considered a primary source of foodborne and environmental outbreaks of STEC infection in
humans ().The incidence of STEC infections in New Zealand has been among the highest in the world. In
2012, a total of 147 clinical STEC cases (3.3 cases/100,000 population) were notified, of
which 142 were confirmed ().
Consistent with observations in previous years, the predominant serotype among the
confirmed cases was O157:H7 (83.8%; 119/142). STEC became a notifiable disease in New
Zealand in 1997, and since then, the annual number of notifications has increased steadily
(). Although the spatial
distribution of STEC cases in New Zealand suggests an association with farming and other
rural activities, limited epidemiologic data are available on the transmission pathways of
STEC from cattle to humans.The objectives of this research were to 1) compare the population structure and geographic
distribution of different genotypes of STEC O157:H7 isolates from bovine and human sources
in New Zealand; 2) assess evidence for localized transmission of STEC from cattle to humans
in New Zealand; and 3) compare the genotype distribution of isolates from New Zealand with
those from Australia, the predominant historic source of imported New Zealand cattle (), and the United States. To
investigate the molecular divergence of isolates, we used 2 molecular typing methods: Shiga
toxin–encoding bacteriophage insertion (SBI) typing and pulsed-field gel
electrophoresis (PFGE) profiling. Although PFGE can provide an indication of genomic
similarities, it cannot provide a reliable measure of genetic relatedness of isolates, and
the visual assessment of bands on an agarose gel to create PFGE profiles can result in
misclassification bias (). By using
2 methods and by examining the concordance between them, we could use the combined
genotyping datasets to assess structuring and patterns of diversity among STEC O157:H7
isolates of bovine and human origin in New Zealand.
Methods
Human Isolates and Data
For the study, we obtained a total of 363 human-derived STEC O157:H7 isolates from
the national Enteric Reference Laboratory (Institute of Environmental Science and
Research Ltd, Upper Hutt, New Zealand) along with the associated PFGE profiles
(restriction enzyme XbaI) and geographic data (North or South
Island, New Zealand, and region on each island). Of the 363 isolates, 278 (76.6%)
originated from the North Island. The isolates were from patients with clinical STEC
infections that occurred in New Zealand during 2008–2011 and represent 71.3%
(363/509) of the STEC O157 cases notified and confirmed during 2008–2011
(). The cases were
reported as sporadic cases or household clusters (i.e., 2 STEC infections in the same
home) and were not associated with confirmed foodborne outbreaks.
Bovine Fecal Isolates and Data
Fecal STEC O157:H7 isolates (n = 40) used in the study had been collected from cattle
in previous studies conducted at beef slaughter plants in New Zealand during 2008
() and 2009–2011
(). Data regarding the
origin (North or South Island, region, farm location) of the cattle and the virulence
profiles of the isolates (virulence genes ehxA,
eae, stx1, stx2, and subtype
stx2c) were available. The isolates were retrieved from feces
samples collected from 26 calves and 14 adult cattle, most (80.0%, 32/40) of which
were from the North Island; the animals originated from 35 farms.
Bovine Meat Isolates and Data
Bovine meat isolates (n = 235) used in the study were from test samples used in
routine mandatory testing at beef-processing plants across New Zealand during
2008–2011. Only PFGE profiles (XbaI) of STEC O157:H7 isolates
were available for this study; the profiles were obtained from the national Enteric
Reference Laboratory. Geographic data associated with meat-sample location (regions
in North and South Islands) were obtained from the Ministry for Primary Industries
(Wellington, New Zealand). Most isolates (85.5%, 201/235) originated from
beef-slaughtering plants in the North Island. Virulence profiles of the isolates were
not available.
PCRs for Detection of Virulence Genes
All human isolates were regrown on Columbia Horse Blood Agar (Fort Richard
Laboratories, Auckland, New Zealand). Bacterial DNA was extracted from 5 colonies by
using 2% Chelex beads solution (Chelex 100 Resin; Bio-Rad, Richmond, CA, USA) and
analyzed in 2 PCR assays by using an automated real-time thermocycler (Rotor Gene
6200HRM; Corbett Research, Mortlake, NSW, Australia).A multiplex PCR assay was performed using previously published primer sequences to
detect the presence of virulence genes encoding for enterohemolysin
(ehxA) (), intimin (eae) (), and Shiga toxins
(stx1 and stx2) (). Primers for detection of genes
stx1 and stx2 did not differentiate between
subtypes of toxins. The final 25-μL PCR reaction volume contained 2×
PCR buffer (Express qPCR SuperMix; Invitrogen, Carlsbad, CA, USA), 2 μmol/L of
each primer, 2.0 μL of DNA, and 2.5 μL of sterile water. The
amplification program included an initial enzyme-activation step of 5 min at
94°C, which was followed by 40 cycles of, 20 s at 94°C, 20 s at
64°C, and 20 s at 72°C, followed in turn by a final extension of 5 min
at 72°C. The PCR products were detected by electrophoresis using a 2% (wt/vol)
agarose gel (Agarose low EEO; AppliChem, Darmstadt, Germany) and then stained with
ethidium bromide and visualized under ultraviolet illumination.stx2-positive isolates were further tested to determine whether the
stx2 gene that was present was the genetic subtype
stx2c. The stx2c gene was detected by using
previously published primer sequences (,). The final 20-μL PCR reaction volume contained
2× PCR buffer (Express qPCR SuperMix; Invitrogen), 2 μmol/L of each
primer, 2.0 μL of DNA, and 6.0 μL of sterile water. The PCR included an
initial enzyme-activation step of 5 min at 94°C, followed by 35 cycles of 20 s
at 94°C and 20 s at 55°C; no extensions were used. The amplified PCR
product was detected as described above.
Molecular Typing Methods
All human and bovine fecal isolates were genotyped by using SBI typing (,); SBI typing is a multiplex PCR method for
screening specific stx-associated bacteriophage insertion sites and
stx genes (stx1 and genetic subtypes
stx2a and stx2c of stx2). The
characters A, W, Y, S and 1, 2a, 2c represent bacteriophage insertion sites
argW, wrbA, yehV,
sbcB, and Shiga toxin genes stx1,
stx2a, stx2c (2 subtypes of
stx2), respectively (,). All bovine fecal isolates were subtyped by using
PFGE (XbaI) according to the standardized laboratory protocol
published by PulseNet International (). The SBI typing was completed at Washington State
University, Pullman, Washington, USA.
Location of Work and Ethical Approval
This work was completed at the Molecular Epidemiology and Public Health Laboratory,
Infectious Disease Research Centre, Hopkirk Research Institute, Massey University,
Palmerston North, New Zealand. The use of STEC isolates from clinical case-patients
in New Zealand was approved by the Multi-region Ethics Committee, Wellington, New
Zealand, on March 19, 2012; reference number MEC/11/04/043.
Data Management and Statistical Analysis
For initial analysis, SBI types were grouped into 4 categories of 3 predominant SBI
types (AY2a, WY12a, and ASY2c/SY2c) and other, less common, SBI types (AS12c, AS2c,
ASWY2c, ASY12c, ASY2a2c, AWY12a, AWY2a, SWY2c, and Y2c). SBI types SY2c and ASY2c
were grouped together because both were relatively common and shared the same
virulence gene profile.Although bovine meat isolates were not SBI-typed, a close correlation between PFGE
profile and SBI type was observed for the human samples (Technical Appendix
Figure 1) and the bovine fecal samples (Technical Appendix
Figure 2). On the basis of the PFGE/SBI
clusters, the most likely SBI type was inferred from the PFGE profiles for the meat
isolates by taking the following approach. First, BioNumerics software version 6.6
(Applied Maths, Sint-Martens-Latem, Belgium) was used to compare PFGE profiles of
human and bovine fecal isolates by conducting an UPGMA (unweighted pair group method
with arithmetic mean) cluster analysis using the Dice similarity coefficient, with a
band matching tolerance of 1%. Second, the UPGMA cluster analysis was applied on PFGE
profiles of bovine meat isolates. The dominant SBI types in human and bovine fecal
isolates were used to assign SBI-like types (AY2a, WY12a, and ASY2c/SY2c) to clusters
with similar PFGE band patterns in bovine meat isolates.
Figure 1
Proportional distributions, stratified by year, of Shiga toxin–encoding
bacteriophage insertion (SBI) types AY2a, WY12a, and ASY2c/SY2c of 363 human
Shiga toxin–producing Escherichia coli O157:H7 isolates
from clinical case-patients in New Zealand, 2008–2011. Error bars
indicate 95% CIs.
Figure 2
NeighborNet () trees
showing population differentiation of Shiga toxin–producing
Escherichia coli O157:H7 isolates from humans and cattle
from different regions in the North Island (red) and the South Island (blue),
New Zealand. A) Isolates from human case-patients (n = 355, 8 isolates
excluded). B) Isolates from bovine meat samples (n = 233, 2 isolates excluded).
C) Map of New Zealand showing different regions from which samples were
collected. The distances indicate population differentiation measured as
pairwise FST values.
Proportional distributions, stratified by year, of Shiga toxin–encoding
bacteriophage insertion (SBI) types AY2a, WY12a, and ASY2c/SY2c of 363 human
Shiga toxin–producing Escherichia coli O157:H7 isolates
from clinical case-patients in New Zealand, 2008–2011. Error bars
indicate 95% CIs.NeighborNet () trees
showing population differentiation of Shiga toxin–producing
Escherichia coli O157:H7 isolates from humans and cattle
from different regions in the North Island (red) and the South Island (blue),
New Zealand. A) Isolates from human case-patients (n = 355, 8 isolates
excluded). B) Isolates from bovine meat samples (n = 233, 2 isolates excluded).
C) Map of New Zealand showing different regions from which samples were
collected. The distances indicate population differentiation measured as
pairwise FST values.χ2 and Fisher exact test for count data were used to evaluate
associations between island and SBI type (AY2a, WY12a, ASY2c/SY2c, and other SBI
types) for bovine fecal, bovine meat, and human isolates; R software (http://www.r-project.org/) was used for statistical computing. p
values for associations between SBI types and region and between SBI types and year
for human and bovine meat isolates were computed by simulating 108 tables
from the null hypothesis (independence) and comparing the results with the test
statistic from the observed data.Population differentiation among human and bovine meat isolates was assessed by using
analysis of molecular variance (AMOVA) applied to haplotypes of isolates’ PFGE
profiles (generated in BioNumerics) using Arlequin software version 3.5.1.2
(http://cmpg.unibe.ch/software/arlequin3/). A multilevel hierarchy was
used for the AMOVA model to assess population differentiation between island, between
regions within island, and within regions. Regions with <5 isolates were excluded
from the analysis. A matrix of pairwise FST values was computed by
comparing the PFGE haplotype frequency distributions for each pair of regions (using
Arlequin, version 3.5.1.2). FST is an index of population differentiation,
measuring the variance between subpopulations relative to the total variance, and
ranges from 0 (no divergence) to 1 (complete divergence). The computed pairwise
FST matrix, representing genetic distances between the regional
populations of STEC O157:H7, was illustrated graphically as a NeighborNet tree by
using SplitsTree software version 4.12.6 ().To illustrate the molecular relatedness and genotypic clustering of isolates, we used
Primer 6 software (http://www.primer-e.com/primer.htm) to link distance matrices of PFGE
profiles of human and bovine meat isolates (generated in BioNumerics) with
explanatory variables (SBI type and region) to create multidimensional scaling plots.
Regions with <5 isolates were excluded from the analysis.To assess the population structure of New Zealand isolates, we compared published
frequency distributions of SBI types in 205 cattle and 79 human STEC O157:H7 isolates
sourced from Australia and in 143 cattle and 179 human STEC O157:H7 isolates sourced
from the United States ()
with frequency distributions of SBI types among bovine and human STEC O157:H7
isolates from New Zealand. To evaluate genetic similarities of human and bovine fecal
isolates, we computed proportional similarity indices (PSI) based on the frequency
distributions of SBI types in humans and cattle from all 3 countries. PSI is a
similarity measure that estimates the area of congruence between 2 frequency
distributions ();
measurements range from 0 (distributions with no common SBI types) to 1 (highest
possible similarity between distributions). Bootstrapped 95% confidence intervals for
PSI values were calculated according to the percentile method described by Efron and
Tibshirani (), using 2,000
iterations. No grouping of SBI types was applied for PSI calculations. To illustrate
the international geographic divergence of isolates, we used differences in PSI
values (1 − PSI) to construct a NeighborNet tree with SplitsTree software
version 4.12.6.
Results
Genotype Diversity
All 403 human and bovine fecal isolates were positive for ehxA,
eae, and stx2 (except
1chxA-negative human isolate); of these, 61 (15.1%) were also
positive for stx1. The different virulence profiles of isolates,
each represented by a dominant SBI type, are shown in Table 1. The predominant SBI types AY2a, WY12a, and ASY2c/SY2c accounted
for 55.0% (22/40), 15.0% (6/40), and 22.5% (9/40) of the studied bovine fecal
isolates, respectively. Similarly, in human isolates, SBI types AY2a, WY12a, and
ASY2c/SY2c were detected in 57.9% (210/363), 13.8% (50/363), and 23.1% (84/363) of
the isolates, respectively. The distributions of AY2a, WY12a, ASY2c/SY2c, and other
SBI types varied by year (p = 0.037) (Figure 1).
On the basis of the genotype calibration of PFGE profiles of bovine meat isolates,
SBI-like types AY2a, WY12a, and ASY2c/SY2c were prevalent in 64.7% (152/235), 23.4%
(55/235), and 11.9% (28/235) of the isolates, respectively. Association between
SBI-like type and year was marginally nonsignificant (p = 0.052).
Table 1
Virulence profiles and SBI types of Shiga toxin–producing
Escherichia coli O157:H7 isolates obtained from humans and
fecal samples from slaughterhouse cattle, New Zealand,
2008–2011*
*NI, North Island of New Zealand; SBI, Shiga toxin–encoding
bacteriophage insertion; SI, South Island of New Zealand; +, gene present;
−, gene absent. †ehxA gene encodes for
enterohemolysin; eae gene encodes for intimin;
stx2, primers for detection of this gene did not
differentiate between subtypes of Shiga toxin type 2; stx2c
gene encodes for Shiga toxin subtype 2c; stx1, primers for
detection of this gene did not differentiate between subtypes of Shiga toxin
type 1.
*NI, North Island of New Zealand; SBI, Shiga toxin–encoding
bacteriophage insertion; SI, South Island of New Zealand; +, gene present;
−, gene absent. †ehxA gene encodes for
enterohemolysin; eae gene encodes for intimin;
stx2, primers for detection of this gene did not
differentiate between subtypes of Shiga toxin type 2; stx2c
gene encodes for Shiga toxin subtype 2c; stx1, primers for
detection of this gene did not differentiate between subtypes of Shiga toxin
type 1.
Between-Island Comparisons
The distribution of SBI types observed differed between North and South Islands in
bovine fecal and human isolates; SBI types AY2a and WY12a were more common in the
North Island, and ASY2c/SY2c was more common in the South Island (Table 2). Similarly, a significant difference in
the prevalence of SBI-like types between islands was observed in bovine meat isolates
(Table 2).
Table 2
Frequency distribution of predominant SBI genotypes of Shiga
toxin–producing Escherichia coli O157:H7 isolates
obtained from humans, bovine fecal samples, and bovine meat samples, New
Zealand, 2008–2011*
Isolate type, SBI
type
No. with SBI
type/no. total (%)
p
value†
North
Island
South Island
Human
AY2a
175/278 (62.9)
35/85 (41.2)
<0.001
WY12a
41/278 (14.7)
9/85 (10.6)
ASY2c/SY2c
49/278 (17.6)
35/85 (41.2)
Other
13/278 (4.7)
6/85 (7.1)
Bovine fecal
AY2a
22/32 (68.8)
0/8
<0.001
WY12a
6/32 (18.8)
0/8
ASY2c/SY2c
1/32 (3.1)
8/8 (100.0)
Bovine meat
AY2a-like
137/201 (68.2)
15/34 (44.1)
<0.001
WY12a-like
49/201 (24.4)
6/34 (17.6)
ASY2c/SY2c-like
15/201 (7.5)
13/34 (38.2)
*SBI, Shiga toxin–encoding bacteriophage
insertion. †Values refer to differences between frequency
distributions of SBI types and North and South Islands (χ2
and Fisher exact test).
*SBI, Shiga toxin–encoding bacteriophage
insertion. †Values refer to differences between frequency
distributions of SBI types and North and South Islands (χ2
and Fisher exact test).
Within-Island Comparisons
By using a 3-level hierarchy of island, region within island, and within region for
the AMOVA model, we found that most of the molecular variation (>98%) resided
between isolates within regions (on the basis of PFGE haplotypes). However, for the
human isolates, a small but highly significant proportion of the molecular variation
was estimated to be between regions within islands (1.03% variation, p<0.001);
this finding provided evidence for highly localized geographic structuring. After we
allowed for between region variation in the model, island was no longer a significant
source of variation for the human isolates (p = 0.212). In contrast, a very small but
significant amount of molecular variation was apparent between islands among the
bovine meat isolates (0.38% variation, p = 0.017), but the proportion of variation
between regions within islands was nonsignificant (0.34% variation, p = 0.121).The population differentiation and geographic clustering of genotypes of STEC O157:H7
isolates from human cases and bovine meat samples from regions of both islands of New
Zealand are illustrated in Figure 2. Consistent
with the AMOVA results, we found evidence of within-island clustering of human
isolates. Two main clusters were observed representing North and South Island
regions, with the exception of Canterbury, which clustered with North Island regions,
and Wellington, Taranaki, and Gisborne, which were North Island outliers. Among human
cases, the highest population differentiation of genotypes of STEC O157:H7 isolates
was observed between the regions of Wellington (15 isolates) and Gisborne (12
isolates) on the North Island (pairwise FST value of 0.071), followed by
Wellington and Otago (10 isolates) (FST = 0.060); the
isolates from Gisborne included 2 household clusters (2 human cases each). For bovine
meat isolates, no obvious structuring was apparent; however, Auckland region (5
isolates) appeared as a strong North Island outlier. Consequently, the most distinct
difference in genotypes was observed between the regions of Auckland and Otago (9
isolates) (FST = 0.060), followed by Auckland and Northland
(26 isolates) (FST = 0.057).The molecular relatedness between PFGE profiles of human isolates, considering SBI
type and region of origin as explanatory variables, is shown in Figure 3. PFGE profiles showed genotypic clustering that was
strongly associated with SBI types AY2a, WY12a, and ASY2c/SY2c, even after
stratifying by island of origin (Figure 3,
panels A, B). Clusters containing SBI type AY2a and ASY2c/SY2c were the predominant
genotypes in the Taranaki and Gisborne regions, respectively, on the North Island
(Figure 3, panel C); the association between
SBI type and region of origin was statistically significant (p<0.001). A similar
genotypic clustering of regions was observed in bovine meat isolates from the North
and South Islands (Technical Appendix
Figure 3).
Figure 3
Multidimensional scaling plots showing the genotypic clustering of human Shiga
toxin–producing Escherichia coli O157:H7 isolates
originating from the North Island (n = 274, 4 isolates excluded) and the South
Island (n = 81, 4 isolates excluded), New Zealand. The plots were determined on
the basis of the isolates’ pulsed-field gel electrophoresis profiles.
Clusters associated with Shiga toxin–encoding bacteriophage insertion
(SBI) types (A) and regions (C) for isolates from the North Island. Clusters
associated with SBI types (B) and regions (D) for isolates from the South
Island. 2D, 2 dimensional.
Multidimensional scaling plots showing the genotypic clustering of human Shiga
toxin–producing Escherichia coli O157:H7 isolates
originating from the North Island (n = 274, 4 isolates excluded) and the South
Island (n = 81, 4 isolates excluded), New Zealand. The plots were determined on
the basis of the isolates’ pulsed-field gel electrophoresis profiles.
Clusters associated with Shiga toxin–encoding bacteriophage insertion
(SBI) types (A) and regions (C) for isolates from the North Island. Clusters
associated with SBI types (B) and regions (D) for isolates from the South
Island. 2D, 2 dimensional.
International Comparison
Within each country, similar frequencies of SBI types were observed in cattle and
human cases, but there were distinct differences in the population structure of SBI
types between countries (Figure 4). Bovine and
human genotypes in New Zealand shared the highest similarity (PSI value 0.92, 95% CI
0.74–0.93), followed by those in Australia (PSI 0.69, 95% CI 0.57–0.79)
and the United States (PSI 0.61, 95% CI 0.51–0.69) (Technical Appendix
Figure 4). The observed differences in
proportional similarities of SBI types among isolates from cattle and humans in all 3
countries are shown in Figure 5.
Figure 4
Proportional distributions of Shiga toxin–encoding bacteriophage
insertion types of Shiga toxin–producing Escherichia
coli O157:H7 isolates sourced from cattle and humans in New Zealand
(NZ), Australia (AU), and the United States (US).
Figure 5
NeighborNet () tree
showing geographic divergence of bovine and human Shiga toxin–producing
Escherichia coli O157:H7 isolates sourced from New Zealand
(40 cattle, 363 human), Australia (205 cattle, 79 human), and the United States
(US) (143 cattle, 179 human). The distance indicates the difference in
proportional similarity of Shiga toxin–encoding bacteriophage insertion
types among the isolates.
Proportional distributions of Shiga toxin–encoding bacteriophage
insertion types of Shiga toxin–producing Escherichia
coli O157:H7 isolates sourced from cattle and humans in New Zealand
(NZ), Australia (AU), and the United States (US).NeighborNet () tree
showing geographic divergence of bovine and human Shiga toxin–producing
Escherichia coli O157:H7 isolates sourced from New Zealand
(40 cattle, 363 human), Australia (205 cattle, 79 human), and the United States
(US) (143 cattle, 179 human). The distance indicates the difference in
proportional similarity of Shiga toxin–encoding bacteriophage insertion
types among the isolates.
Discussion
We assessed the molecular epidemiologic evidence for transmission of STEC from cattle to
humans in New Zealand and the relationship between population structure and geography at
multiple spatial scales. The molecular analysis of bovine and human STEC O157:H7
isolates showed a concordant geographic variation of genotypes (SBI types) in both
populations. In addition, there were marked differences between isolates from New
Zealand’s North and South Islands, a finding that is consistent with localized
transmission of STEC between cattle and humans.The evidence of localized transmission of STEC between cattle and humans in New Zealand
has advanced our understanding of the epidemiology of sporadic STEC infections in the
country and is consistent with environmental- or animal-associated sources of infection
rather than more disseminated foodborne outbreaks (). Measures to prevent direct contact with animal fecal
material in the environment include the wearing of protective clothing, increased hand
washing, and targeted education of the population at risk regarding possible sources of
STEC infection.The North and South Islands of New Zealand are separated by the Cook Strait, a
geographic barrier of >20 km. This barrier might contribute to the island-associated
differences in distribution of genotypes observed in this study, by restricting the
movement of carrier animals between islands. Cattle populations on each island are
large: ≈6.6 million on the North Island and ≈3.5 million on the South
Island (). Despite the
islands’ large cattle populations, the number of livestock moved between the
islands (i.e., from farm to farm or farm to slaughter) is relatively low: ≈42,400
cattle from North to South Island, and ≈64,600 cattle from South to North Island
per year (). Thus, the
movement of cattle probably has a limited influence on the distinct distribution of
genotypes across both islands.Although none of the bovine meat isolates were SBI typed, the PFGE data showed a strong
island-associated distribution of bovine STEC O157:H7 genotypes, which was equivalent to
the patterns observed in fecal isolates from cattle and humans. Bovine meat isolates
were retrieved from carcass swab samples and bulk meat samples collected at
beef-processing plants, so it could be hypothesized that fresh beef meat might be an
exposure pathway for humans. However, although various food sources (including beef)
were considered as potential risk factors during a nationwide prospective case-control
study on sporadic STEC infections in humans, food was not identified as a major exposure
pathway of infections in New Zealand ().Significant genetic variation was observed among human isolates at the regional level,
indicating a more localized spatial clustering of STEC O157:H7 genotypes. Strong
regional variation in the prevalence of zoonotic diseases has been observed previously
in New Zealand. For example, there is marked regional variation in the distribution of
serotypes in human cases of salmonellosis: Salmonella enterica ser.
Brandenburg was associated with sheep and human infections in the southern regions of
the South Island (), whereas
the wild bird–associated S. enterica ser. Typhimurium DT160 was
distributed more evenly across the whole country (). S. enterica ser. Brandenburg has
not been found to be endemic in any other regions in New Zealand, and it is likely that
the spatial pattern of disease is influenced by environmental factors, such as the
presence and density of local maintenance hosts.Cattle are considered the most likely maintenance host of STEC O157:H7, and the
association between human cases and cattle density suggests that spillover from cattle
to humans is the main pathway (); however, overseas, the pathogen has frequently been
isolated from sheep (–) and deer (,). Cookson et al. (,) identified STEC serotypes of public health concern in
sheep from the lower North Island of New Zealand but did not isolate STEC O157:H7. No
nationwide studies of sheep or deer have been undertaken in New Zealand, hence sheep
cannot be ruled out as potential maintenance hosts for region-specific populations of
STEC O157:H7.The observed regional clustering of genotypes among human STEC O157:H7 isolates leads to
another hypothesis: other, yet unidentified, hosts could be reservoir/maintenance hosts
in the epidemiology of STEC, and cattle are possibly only serving as “bridging
hosts” at the human–animal interface (), transmitting STEC to humans. For example, starlings
have been implicated as biologic vectors in the dissemination of STEC among dairy farms
in Ohio, United States (,), indicating that wildlife might
play a key role in the epidemiology and ecology of STEC.A relatively high prevalence of SBI types AY2a and ASY2c was observed in human and
bovine fecal isolates from New Zealand. These findings are in contrast to those from the
Australian study by Mellor et al. (), in which SBI type AY2a was not identified (0/284
isolates; p<0.001) and accounted for only 8.1% (26/322) of the isolates from the
United States (human and cattle combined); SBI type ASY2c was prevalent in <1.0% of
combined isolates in both countries. These differences in frequency distributions of SBI
types indicate marked differences in the population structure of SBI types between
countries. Australia and New Zealand are neighboring countries but separated by the
Tasman Sea, a distance of ≈1,250 km. On the basis of historic data, Australia has
been the predominant source of imported New Zealand cattle, mainly in the 19th century
(). Hence, the distinct
geographic divergence of STEC O157:H7 genotypes between the 2 countries is somewhat
puzzling and would suggest a limited historic introduction of STEC O157:H7 from
Australia or elsewhere into New Zealand and a subsequent evolution in the New Zealand
host population. Alternatively, the observed divergence of genotypes between Australia
and New Zealand could be the result of genetic drift and/or selection driven by
different environmental factors, such as climate, types of feed, husbandry systems, or
animal genetics.In this study, the highest PSI was observed between cattle and human isolates from New
Zealand, followed by that between isolates from Australia and the United States. These
findings provide evidence for a close association between populations of isolates from
cattle and humans, which is consistent with the transmission of STEC from cattle to
humans. This finding is in agreement with the national case–control study on
clinical STEC cases in New Zealand, which identified variables related to beef and dairy
cattle as major risk factors ().The molecular analysis of STEC O157:H7 isolates from cattle and persons with STEC
infection revealed that prevalences of bovine and human isolates in the North Island
were distinctly different from those of the South Island, suggesting localized
transmission of STEC between cattle and humans. Furthermore, a distribution of STEC
O157:H7 genotypes different from that observed overseas suggests a historic introduction
of a subset of the globally circulating STEC O157:H7 strains into New Zealand.
Technical Appendix
Pulsed-field gel electrophoresis profiles of human and bovine Escherichia
coli O157:H7 isolates, multidimensional scaling plots showing
genotypic clustering of isolates, and proportional similarity index values.
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