Affiliation:
1. Institut für Mikrobiologie und Tierseuchen, Freie Universität Berlin, 10115 Berlin,1
2. Institut für Hygiene und Infektionskrankheiten der Tiere, Justus-Liebig-Universität Giessen, 35392 Giessen,2
3. Robert-Koch-Institut, 13353 Berlin,3
4. Landesuntersuchungsamt für das Gesundheitswesen Nordbayern, 90419 Nürnberg,4 and
5. Institut für Hygiene und Mikrobiologie, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität Würzburg, 97080 Würzburg,5 Germany
Abstract
ABSTRACT
A recent case report of a child infected with enterohemorrhagic
Escherichia coli
(EHEC) of serotype O118:H16 in Bavaria, in association with the isolation of a bovine O118 strain on the same farm (A. Weber, H. Klie, H. Richter, P. Gallien, M. Timm, and K. W. Perlberg, Berl. Muench. Tieraerztl. Wochenschr. 110:211–213, 1997), prompted us to investigate the relationship between bovine and human strains of serogroup O118. A total of 29 human O118
E. coli
strains from Europe (21), Canada (4), and Peru (4) were compared by virulence typing and macrorestriction analysis with 7 bovine O118 EHEC strains isolated in Bavaria. Twenty-five of the human strains were characterized as EHEC. By serotyping and determination of the virulence-associated factors Shiga toxin (
stx1 stx2 stx2
variants), intimin (
eae
), and EHEC hemolysin (Hly
EHEC
), three distinctive groups of O118 human pathogens were identified. Most of the strains belonged to serotype O118:H16, displaying the virulence traits Stx1, intimin, Hly
EHEC
, and EspP/PssA (group 1). In addition, we identified strains of serotype O118:H12 (Stx2d only; group 2) and of serotype O118:H30 (Stx2 and intimin; group 3). Macrorestriction analysis with
Bln
I and
Xba
I revealed that all strains with a single O118 serotype profile (O118:H12, O118:H16, and O118:H30) belonged to one clonal cluster, irrespective of their origin. Group 1 strains clustered in the same clonal group as the bovine O118:H16 strains. Moreover, four pairs of strains of different origins and indistinguishable by all other methods applied were identified as group 1 strains. Our data support the direct transmission of an EHEC O118:H16 strain from a calf to a 2-year-old boy in the above-mentioned case report. Since bovine and human O118:H16 strains represent the same clones, they must be considered zoonotic EHEC pathogens. In contrast, EHEC strains of serotypes O118:H12 and O118:H30 have been isolated only from humans, indicating a reservoir for certain human O118 EHEC strains other than bovines.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Reference37 articles.
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