Affiliation:
1. Department of Microbiology, All India Institute of Medical Sciences, Bathinda, India
2. Department of Medical Microbiology, Postgraduate Institute of Medical Education and Research, Chandigarh, India
Abstract
Introduction. Diarrhoeagenic
Escherichia coli
(DEC) remains one of the major causes of acute diarrhoea episodes in developing countries. The percentage of acute diarrhoea cases caused by DEC is 30–40 % in these countries. Approximately 10% of
E. coli
isolates obtained from stool specimens have been reported to be non-lactose-fermenting (NLF). The available literature is sparse regarding the pathogenicity of NLF
E. coli
causing infectious diarrhoea.
Aim. We aimed to elucidate the importance of NLF
E. coli
in causing diarrhoea in both adults and children by detecting various DEC pathotypes among NLF
E. coli
in stool samples taken from gastroenteritis cases.
Material and Methods. A total of 376 NLF
E. coli
isolates from 3110 stool samples from diarrhoea/gastroenteritis patients were included in the study. Up to three NLF colonies that were not confirmed as
Vibrio cholerae
,
Aeromonas
spp.,
Salmonella
spp. or
Shigella
spp., but were identified as
E. coli
using matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization time-of-flight (MALDI-TOF), were carefully picked up from each MacConkey agar plate and then meticulously streaked onto freshly prepared, sterilized nutrient agar plates, and biochemical reactions were conducted. Multiplex PCR was conducted for the EAEC, EPEC, ETEC and EHEC pathotypes and PCR for the ipaH gene was conducted for EIEC. The disc diffusion method was used for antibiotic sensitivity testing.
Results. Using multiplex PCR and ipaH PCR, a total of 63 pathotypes of DEC were obtained, with EAEC being the most predominant (n=31) followed by EIEC (n=22), EPEC (n=8) and ETEC (n=2). To further differentiate EIEC from
Shigella
, additional biochemical tests were performed, including acetate utilization, mucate and salicin fermentation, and aesculin hydrolysis. Antimicrobial susceptibility testing (AST) showed that maximum resistance was seen against ciprofloxacin (82.5 %) followed by ampicillin (77.8 %) and cotrimoxazole (68.2 %), and minimum resistance was seen against ertapenem (4.8 %).
Conclusion. In our study two pathotypes (EAEC, EIEC) were predominant among NLF
E. coli
and these were not only important aetiological agents in children, but also in adults. Our study also sheds light on the epidemiology of EIEC, which is one of the most neglected DEC pathotypes, as hardly any microbiological laboratories process NLF
E. coli
for EIEC.
Subject
Microbiology (medical),Microbiology