Affiliation:
1. Cooperative Research Centre for Cattle and Beef Quality, Elizabeth Macarthur Agricultural Institute, Camden, New South Wales 2570
2. Department of Biological Sciences, University of Wollongong, New South Wales 2522
3. Microbiological Diagnostic Unit, Public Health Laboratory, Department of Microbiology and Immunology, University of Melbourne, Parkville, Victoria 3052, Australia
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Unlike Shiga toxin 2 (
stx
2
) genes, most nucleotide sequences of Shiga toxin 1 (
stx
1
) genes from Shiga toxin-producing
Escherichia coli
(STEC),
Shigella dysenteriae
, and several bacteriophages (H19B, 933J, and H30) are highly conserved. Consequently, there has been little incentive to investigate variants of
stx
1
among STEC isolates derived from human or animal sources. However
stx
1OX3
, originally identified in an OX3:H8 isolate from a healthy sheep in Germany, differs from other
stx
1
subtypes by 43 nucleotides, resulting in changes to 12 amino acid residues, and has been renamed
stx
1c
. In this study we describe the development of a PCR-restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) assay that distinguishes
stx
1c
from other
stx
1
subtypes. The PCR-RFLP assay was used to study 378
stx
1
-containing STEC isolates. Of these, 207 were isolated from sheep, 104 from cattle, 45 from humans, 11 from meat, 5 from swine, 5 from unknown sources, and 1 from a cattle water trough. Three hundred fifty-five of the 378 isolates (93.9%) also possessed at least one other associated virulence gene (
ehxA
,
eaeA
, and/or
stx
2
); the combination
stx
1
,
stx
2
, and
ehxA
was the most common (175 of 355 [49.3%]), and 90 of 355 (25.4%) isolates possessed
eaeA
. One hundred thirty-six of 207 (65.7%) ovine isolates possessed
stx
1c
alone and belonged to 41 serotypes. Seventy-one of 136 (52.2%) comprised the common ovine serotypes O5:H
−
, O128:H2, and O123:H
−
. Fifty-two of 207 isolates (25.1%) possessed an
stx
1
subtype; 27 (51.9%) of these belonged to serotype O91:H
−
. Nineteen of 207 isolates (9.2%) contained both
stx
1c
and
stx
1
subtypes, and 14 belonged to serotype O75:H8. In marked contrast, 97 of 104 (93.3%) bovine isolates comprising 44 serotypes possessed an
stx
1
subtype, 6 isolates possessed
stx
1c
, and the remaining isolate possessed both
stx
1c
and
stx
1
subtypes. Ten of 11 (91%) isolates cultured from meat in New Zealand possessed
stx
1c
(serotypes O5:H
−
, O75:H8/H40, O81:H26, O88:H25, O104:H
−
/H7, O123:H
−
/H10, and O128:H2); most of these serotypes are commonly recovered from the feces of healthy sheep. Serotypes containing
stx
1
recovered from cattle rarely were the same as those isolated from sheep. Although an
stx
1c
subtype was never associated with the typical enterohemorrhagic
E. coli
serogroups O26, O103, O111, O113, and O157, 13 human isolates possessed
stx
1c
. Of these, six isolates with serotype O128:H2 (from patients with diarrhea), four O5:H
−
isolates (from patients with hemolytic-uremic syndrome), and three isolates with serotypes O123:H
−
(diarrhea), OX3:H8 (hemolytic-uremic syndrome), and O81:H6 (unknown health status) represent serotypes that are commonly isolated from sheep.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology