Shiga Toxin-Producing Escherichia coli Strains from Romania: A Whole Genome-Based Description

Author:

Usein Codruța-Romanița1,Oprea Mihaela1ORCID,Dinu Sorin1,Popa Laura-Ioana1,Cristea Daniela1,Militaru Cornelia-Mădălina1,Ghiță Andreea1,Costin Mariana23,Popa Ionela-Loredana23,Croitoru Anca23ORCID,Bologa Cristina2,Rusu Lavinia-Cipriana4ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Cantacuzino National Military Medical Institute of Research and Development, 050096 Bucharest, Romania

2. Emergency Clinical Hospital for Children “M.S. Curie”, 041451 Bucharest, Romania

3. Discipline Pediatrics—Emergency Clinical Hospital for Children M.S. Curie, University of Medicine and Pharmacy “Carol Davila” Bucharest, 050474 Bucharest, Romania

4. National Centre for Communicable Diseases Prevention and Control, National Public Health Institute, 050463 Bucharest, Romania

Abstract

The zoonotic Shiga toxin-producing Escherichia coli (STEC) group is unanimously regarded as exceptionally hazardous for humans. This study aimed to provide a genomic perspective on the STEC recovered sporadically from humans and have a foundation of internationally comparable data. Fifty clinical STEC isolates, representing the culture-confirmed infections reported by the STEC Reference Laboratory between 2016 and 2023, were subjected to whole-genome sequencing (WGS) analysis and sequences were interpreted using both commercial and public free bioinformatics tools. The WGS analysis revealed a genetically diverse population of STEC dominated by non-O157 serogroups commonly reported in human STEC infections in the European Union. The O26:H11 strains of ST21 lineage played a major role in the clinical disease resulting in hospitalisation and cases of paediatric HUS in Romania surpassing the O157:H7 strains. The latter were all clade 7 and mostly ST1804. Notably, among the Romanian isolates was a stx2a-harbouring cryptic clade I strain associated with a HUS case, stx2f- and stx2e-positive strains, and hybrid strains displaying a mixture of intestinal and extraintestinal virulence genes were found. As a clearer picture emerges of the STEC strains responsible for infections in Romania, further surveillance efforts are needed to uncover their prevalence, sources, and reservoirs.

Funder

Research and Development Programme EMERGENT

Romanian Ministry of Defence

Publisher

MDPI AG

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