Affiliation:
1. Department of Environmental Analysis and Design, University of California, Irvine, Irvine, California 92697
2. Orange County Sanitation District, Fountain Valley, California 92708
Abstract
ABSTRACT
The prevalence among all
Escherichia coli
bacteria of the LTIIa toxin gene and STII toxin gene, both associated with enterotoxigenic
E. coli
, and of three genes (
stxI
,
stxII
, and
eaeA
) associated with enterohemorrhagic
E. coli
was determined in farm waste disposal systems seasonally for 1 year. Single- and nested-PCR results for the number of
E. coli
isolates carrying each toxin gene trait were compared with a five-replicate most-probable-number (MPN) method. The STII and LTIIa toxin genes were present continuously at all farms and downstream waters that were tested. Nested-MPN-PCR manifested sensitivity increased over that of single-MPN-PCR by a factor of 32 for LTIIa, 10 for STII, and 2 for the
stxI
,
stxII
, and
eaeA
genes. The geometric mean prevalence of each toxin gene within the
E. coli
community in waste disposal site waters after nested MPN-PCR was 1:8.5
E. coli
isolates (1:8.5
E. coli
) for the LTIIa toxin gene and 1:4
E. coli
for the STII toxin gene. The geometric mean prevalence for the simultaneous occurrence of toxin genes
stxI
,
stxII
, and
eaeA
, was 1:182
E. coli
. These findings based on total population analysis suggest that prevalence rates for these genes are higher than previously reported in studies based on surveys of single isolates. With a population-based approach, the frequency of each toxin gene at the corresponding disposal sites and the endemic nature of diseases on farms can be easily assessed, allowing farmers and public health officials to evaluate the risk of infection to animals or humans.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Ecology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Food Science,Biotechnology
Cited by
37 articles.
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