Affiliation:
1. Molecular Microbiology Unit, Women’s and Children’s Hospital, North Adelaide, South Australia 5006, Australia
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Shiga toxigenic
Escherichia coli
(STEC) comprises a diverse group of organisms capable of causing severe gastrointestinal disease in humans. Within the STEC family, certain strains appear to be of greater virulence for humans, for example, those belonging to serogroups O111 and O157 and those with particular combinations of other putative virulence traits. We have developed two multiplex PCR assays for the detection and genetic characterization of STEC in cultures of feces or foodstuffs. Assay 1 utilizes four PCR primer pairs and detects the presence of
stx
1
,
stx
2
(including variants of
stx
2
),
eaeA
, and enterohemorrhagic
E. coli hlyA
, generating amplification products of 180, 255, 384, and 534 bp, respectively. Assay 2 uses two primer pairs specific for portions of the
rfb
(O-antigen-encoding) regions of
E. coli
serotypes O157 and O111, generating PCR products of 259 and 406 bp, respectively. The two assays were validated by testing 52 previously characterized STEC strains and observing 100% agreement with previous results. Moreover, assay 2 did not give a false-positive O157 reaction with enteropathogenic
E. coli
strains belonging to clonally related serogroup O55. Assays 1 and 2 detected STEC of the appropriate genotype in primary fecal cultures from five patients with hemolytic-uremic syndrome and three with bloody diarrhea. Thirty-one other primary fecal cultures from patients without evidence of STEC infection were negative.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Cited by
1031 articles.
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