Affiliation:
1. Department of Microbiology, Faculty of Science, Stellenbosch University, Stellenbosch, South Africa
2. Department of Biomedical Sciences, Faculty of Health and Wellness Sciences, Cape Peninsula University of Technology, Bellville, South Africa
Abstract
ABSTRACT
The possible health risks associated with the consumption of harvested rainwater remains one of the major obstacles hampering its large-scale implementation in water limited countries such as South Africa. Rainwater tank samples collected on eight occasions during the low- and high-rainfall periods (March to August 2012) in Kleinmond, South Africa, were monitored for the presence of virulence genes associated with
Escherichia coli
. The identity of presumptive
E. coli
isolates in rainwater samples collected from 10 domestic rainwater harvesting (DRWH) tanks throughout the sampling period was confirmed through universal 16S rRNA PCR with subsequent sequencing and phylogenetic analysis. Species-specific primers were also used to routinely screen for the virulent genes,
aggR
,
stx
,
eae
, and
ipaH
found in enteroaggregative
E. coli
(EAEC), enterohemorrhagic
E. coli
(EHEC), enteropathogenic
E. coli
(EPEC), and enteroinvasive
E. coli
, respectively, in the rainwater samples. Of the 92
E. coli
strains isolated from the rainwater using culture based techniques, 6% were presumptively positively identified as
E. coli
O157:H7 using 16S rRNA. Furthermore, virulent pathogenic
E. coli
genes were detected in 3% (EPEC and EHEC) and 16% (EAEC) of the 80 rainwater samples collected during the sampling period from the 10 DRWH tanks. This study thus contributes valuable information to the limited data available regarding the ongoing prevalence of virulent pathotypes of
E. coli
in harvested rainwater during a longitudinal study in a high-population-density, periurban setting.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Ecology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Food Science,Biotechnology
Cited by
35 articles.
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