| Literature DB >> 28249570 |
Salma A Lajhar1,2,3, Jeremy Brownlie4, Robert Barlow5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: After E. coli O157, E. coli O26 is the second most prevalent enterohaemorrhagic E. coli (EHEC) serotype identified in cases of foodborne illness in Australia and throughout the world. E. coli O26 associated foodborne outbreaks have drawn attention to the survival capabilities of this organism in a range of environments. The aim of the present study was to assess the ability of E. coli O26 to survive the effects of disinfectants, acids and antimicrobials and investigate the possible influence of virulence genes in survival and persistence of E. coli O26 from human and cattle sources from Australia.Entities:
Keywords: Antimicrobial agent; Disinfectant; E. coli O26; Organic acid; Pathotype; Virulence marker
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28249570 PMCID: PMC5333398 DOI: 10.1186/s12866-017-0963-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Microbiol ISSN: 1471-2180 Impact factor: 3.605
PCR Primer sequences used in this study
| Primers | Sequence | Amplicon size | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| stx1-F | 5'-ATAAATCGCCATTCGTTGACTAC-3' | 180 | [ |
| stx1-R | 5'-AGAACGCCCACTGAGATCATC-3' | ||
| stx2-F | 5'-GGCACTGTCTGAAACTGATCC-3' | 255 | [ |
| stx2-R | 5'-TCGCCAGTTATCTGACATTCTG-3' | ||
| eae-F | 5'-GACCCGGCACAAGCATAAGC-3' | 284 | [ |
| eae-R | 5'-CCACCTGCAGCAACAAGAGG-3' | ||
| hlyA-F | 5'-GCATCATCAAGC GTACGT TCC-3' | 534 | [ |
| hlyA-R | 5'-AATGAGCCAAGCTGGTTAAGC T-3' | ||
| wzx O26-F | 5'-CGCGACGGCAGAGAAAATT-3' | 326 | [ |
| wzx O26-R | 5'-ACAATCCAACCGAACCAAAC-3' | This study | |
| ecf-F | 5'-TATCAGCACCAAAGAGCGGGAACA-3' | 99 | [ |
| ecf-R | 5'-CCCTTATGAAGAGCCAGTACTGAA-3' | ||
| rmlA 30snp-F | 5'-AAGTCGCAGGCTTGT-3' | 484 | This study |
| rmlA 30snp-R | 5'-CGAAGACCCGCTAAC-3' | ||
| BFPA300-F | 5'-GGAAGTCAAATTCATGGG-3' | 300 | [ |
| BFPA300-R | 5'-GGAATCAGACGCAGACTGGT-3' |
Prevalence of genetic markers in E. coli O26 from clinical and cattle sources
| Pathotypes | Virulence makers | No of isolates | Source |
|---|---|---|---|
| EHEC |
| 50 | Clinical and cattle |
| pEHEC |
| 3 | Cattle |
| aEPEC |
| 33 | Cattle |
| NTEC | Negative for all virulence markers tested | 2 | Cattle |
Distribution of antimicrobial MICs among E. coli O26 isolates from cattle and human sources
aOnly a susceptible breakpoint (≤4 μg/ml) has been established. Isolates with an MIC ≥8 μg/ml are reported as non-susceptible. Vertical lines indicate breakpoints for resistance. The white fields indicate the dilution range tested for each antimicrobial. Grey area indicates MIC values greater than or less than the tested concentration. Number of isolates is in percentage (%).*CI: Confidence intervals
Fig. 1PFGE profiles and clusters of O26 isolates investigated in this study. All 88 isolates were analysed by PFGE with XbaI, and cluster analysis of the patterns was performed by BioNumerics V7.5 software using the Dice coefficient and unweighted pair group method (UPGMA). The degree of similarity (%) is shown on the scale at the top left of the figure. The cut-off level of 90% was chosen to assign isolates to the same cluster. At 74% similarity isolates were assigned to 2 clusters (a & b)
Distribution of disinfectant MICs among 40 E. coli O26 isolates from cattle and human sources
Light Grey fields indicate the recommended working concentrations for each disinfectant, Dark Grey fields indicate the dilution range tested for each disinfectant agents. Numbers in the white field indicates number and percentage of isolates susceptible to disinfectants at the tested concentration
MICsμg/ml distribution of acids for 40 E. coli O26 isolates from human and cattle
| Acids | Tested range (μg/ml) | MIC μg/ml | pH | No of isolates (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Acetic acid | 64-65563 | 1024 | 4.08 | 35 (87.5) |
| 512 | 4.42 | 5 (12.5) | ||
| Citric acid | 64-65563 | 4096 | 3.31 | 35 (87.5) |
| 2048 | 3.75 | 5 (12.5) | ||
| Lactic acid | 64-65563 | 2048 | 3.67 | 40 (100) |
| Propionic acid | 64-65563 | 1024 | 4.55 | 40 (100) |