| Literature DB >> 27258021 |
Marawan Abu-Madi1, Jerzy M Behnke2, Aarti Sharma1, Rebecca Bearden1, Nadia Al-Banna3.
Abstract
Chicken meat from the shelves of supermarkets in Qatar was tested for the presence of Campylobacter spp. and the presence of five virulence genes (htrB, cdtB, clpP, cadF and ciaB) was assessed in isolates. Forty eight percent of the chickens provided for supermarkets by Saudi (53%) and Qatari (45.9%) producers were found to be contaminated and the most important factor affecting the overall prevalence of contaminated chickens was the store from which chicken samples originated. Variation in prevalence of Campylobacter in chicken meat from different stores was evident even when the same producer supplied the three stores in our survey. Differences in the prevalence and in the combinations of virulence genes in isolates that can and cannot grow in a classic maintenance medium (Karmali) were identified, providing a starting point for linking presence/absence of particular virulence genes with actual in vivo virulence and pathogenicity. Because of the relatively low infective doses of Campylobacter that are required to initiate infection in humans, it will be important to explore further the relationships we identified between certain Campylobacter virulence genes and their capacity for survival in poultry meat, and hence their contribution to the incidence of campylobacteriosis.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27258021 PMCID: PMC4892673 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0156938
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Schematic diagram of the stages in the analysis of samples.
The number of samples at each stage are shown.
Fig 2Factors affecting the percentage of contaminated chickens.
(A) Variation in the percentage of contaminated chickens from producer companies detected at three stores; (B) Variation in the percentage of contaminated chickens among the three weight classes from the various producer companies.
Prevalence (%) of C. jejuni by country in which the producer was based, the company providing chickens, the store selling the chickens and the weight class of samples chickens.
| Factor | Level | % | CL95 | DoF | χ2 | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Country | Qatar | 149 | 53.0 | 44.54–61.29 | |||
| Saudi Arabia | 233 | 45.9 | 41.24–50.61 | 1 | 1.83 | 0.176 | |
| Company | 1 | 149 | 53.0 | 44.54–61.29 | |||
| 2 | 115 | 51.3 | 43.85–58.76 | ||||
| 3 | 53 | 39.6 | 30.10–49.86 | ||||
| 4 | 43 | 48.8 | 32.63–65.42 | ||||
| 6 | 22 | 27.3 | 12.61–50.00 | 4 | 7.40 | 0.116 | |
| Store | 1 | 148 | 58.1 | 49.67–66.22 | |||
| 2 | 68 | 47.1 | 35.96–58.54 | ||||
| 3 | 166 | 32.35 | 32.35–49.94 | 2 | 9.33 | ||
| Weight class | 1 | 117 | 54.7 | 47.19–62.00 | |||
| 2 | 105 | 41.9 | 35.00–49.05 | ||||
| 3 | 160 | 48.8 | 39.95–57.57 | 2 | 3.64 | 0.162 |
The sample size was n = 382
* See Materials and methods for further information about each of the factor levels.
Presence of 5 virulence factors in colonies grown in Karmali medium that were either positive or negative for C. jejuni, and combined.
| Virulence factor | Percentage (CL95) | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Combined ( | |||
| 94.9 (90.50–97.34) | 75.9 (57.00–88.46) | 91.1 (85.06–94.89) | |
| 94.9 (90.50–97.34) | 72.4 (53.50–86.39) | 90.4 (84.35–94.38) | |
| 99.2 (96.33–99.86) | 82.8 (64.05–92.95) | 95.9 (91.17–98.27) | |
| 96.6 (92.71–98.53) | 75.9 (57.00–88.46) | 92.5 (86.73–95.89) | |
| 100 (97.81–100) | 100 (88.47–100) | 100 (97.27–100) | |
* χ21 = 8.74, P = 0.0031
** χ21 = 11.73, P = 0.0006
*** χ21 = 12.11, P = 0.0005
**** χ21 = 12.23, P = 0.0005
Significant interactions among virulence factors in isolates that grew in Karmali medium (n = 146).
| % | CL95 | χ2 | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| (26.46–80.04) | ||||
| (96.21–99.90) | 23.1 | <0.001 | ||
| (37.11–84.72) | ||||
| (96.23–99.89) | 15.6 | <0.001 | ||
| (20.61–68.28) | ||||
| (91.91–98.40) | 21.6 | <0.001 |
Almost all the C. jejuni-positive colonies possessed all five virulence factors (104/117 = 88.9%) and there was just one colony that had a single virulence factor (ciaB). In contrast, only 17/29 C. jejuni-negative colonies (58.6%) had all five virulent factors and 3 had just one (again ciaB in each case).
Presence (%) of 5 virulence factors in DNA samples from BPW enrichment media of chickens that failed to produce colonies in Karmali medium.
| Virulence factor | % | (CL95) |
|---|---|---|
| 12.0 | (6.12–21.86) | |
| 6.7 | (2.57–15.38) | |
| 30.7 | (20.66–42.63) | |
| 26.7 | (17.27–38.36) | |
| 8.0 | (3.27–17.07) |
Comparison of prevalence (%) of virulence factors on chickens supplied by Qatari and Saudi Arabian producers.
| Factor | Source | PCR for Cj | Qatar % (CL95) | Saudi Arabia %(CL95) | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Karmali | +ve | 92.6 (85.24–96.57) | 96.8 (90.39–99.19) | 1.078 | 0.299 | |
| Karmali | -ve | 80.0 (34.26–98.97) | 75.0 (54.24–88.50) | 0.058 | 0.809 | |
| Karmali | combined | 91.5 (83.51–96.04) | 90.8 (80.48–96.16) | 0.023 | 0.880 | |
| Karmali | +ve | 98.1 (92.74–99.70) | 92.1 (83.85–96.52) | 2.443 | 0.118 | |
| Karmali | -ve | 80.0 (34.26–98.97) | 70.8 (50.00–86.08) | 0.184 | 0.668 | |
| Karmali | combined | 96.6 (90.37–99.05) | 86.2 (74.66–93.01) | |||
| Karmali | +ve | 100 (95.95–100) | 98.4 (92.61–99.80) | 1.245 | 0.264 | |
| Karmali | -ve | 100 (50.00–100) | 79.2 (58.49–91.41) | 2.099 | 0.147 | |
| Karmali | combined | 100 (95.58–100) | 93.1 (83.38–97.55) | |||
| Karmali | +ve | 96.3 (90.28–98.83) | 96.8 (90.39–99.19) | 0.025 | 0.875 | |
| Karmali | -ve | 60.0 (18.93–92.35) | 79.2 (58.49–91.41) | 0.761 | 0.383 | |
| Karmali | combined | 93.2 (85.75–97.01) | 92.0 (82.04–96.93) | 0.082 | 0.775 | |
| BPW | +ve | 8.0 (1.45–25.59) | 10.9 (3.55–26.31) | 0.155 | 0.694 | |
| BPW | +ve | 4.0 (0.21–19.56) | 6.5 (1.31–20.39) | 0.204 | 0.651 | |
| BPW | +ve | 36.0 (19.57–56.08) | 26.1 (13.32–43.48) | 0.753 | 0.386 | |
| BPW | +ve | 20.0 (8.23–39.84) | 28.3 (15.11–45.68) | 0.599 | 0.439 | |
| BPW | +ve | 8.0 (1.45–25.59) | 6.5 (1.31–20.39) | 0.053 | 0.818 |
For Karmali isolates for +ve, -ve and combined isolates from Qatar the sample sizes were 54, 5 and 59, and for Saudi Arabia 63, 24 and 87, respectively.
For DNA isolated from BPW enrichment media, all positive for C. jejuni, the sample sizes were 25 from Qatar and 46 from Saudi Arabia
* Significant outcomes are emphasized in bold. All tests have one degree of freedom.