| Literature DB >> 9423838 |
M S Donnenberg1, C O Tacket, G Losonsky, G Frankel, J P Nataro, G Dougan, M M Levine.
Abstract
Two studies of adult volunteers were performed to determine whether prior enteropathogenic Escherichia coli (EPEC) infection confers protective immunity against rechallenge. In the first study, a naive control group and volunteers who had previously ingested an O55:H6 strain were fed an O127:H6 strain. In the second study, a control group and volunteers who had previously ingested either the O127:H6 strain or an isogenic eae deletion mutant of that strain were challenged with the homologous wild-type strain. There was no significant effect of prior infection on the incidence of diarrhea in either study. However, in the homologous-rechallenge study, disease was significantly milder in the group previously challenged with the wild-type strain. Disease severity was inversely correlated with the level of prechallenge serum immunoglobulin G against the O127 lipopolysaccharide. These studies indicate that prior EPEC infection can reduce disease severity upon homologous challenge. Further studies may require the development of new model systems.Entities:
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Year: 1998 PMID: 9423838 PMCID: PMC107857
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Infect Immun ISSN: 0019-9567 Impact factor: 3.441