Affiliation:
1. Groupe de Recherche Pathogénie Bactérienne Intestinale, Faculté de Pharmacie, Université d'Auvergne Clermont-1,1
2. Laboratoire de Bactériologie, Faculté de Médecine,2
3. Service de Pédiatrie, Centre Hospitalier Universitaire,3 and
4. Laboratoire Départemental d'Analyses Vétérinaires et Biologiques,4 Clermont-Ferrand, France, and
5. The International Escherichia Centre (WHO), Statens Serum Institut, Copenhagen, Denmark5
Abstract
ABSTRACT
During a 1-year survey of Shiga toxin-producing
Escherichia coli
(STEC) prevalence in central France, 2,143 samples were investigated by PCR for Shiga toxin-encoding genes. A total of 330 (70%) of 471 fecal samples collected from healthy cattle at the Clermont-Ferrand slaughterhouse, 47 (11%) of 411 beef samples, 60 (10%) of 603 cheese samples, and 19 (3%) of 658 stool specimens from hospitalized children with and without diarrhea were positive for the
stx
gene(s). A STEC strain was isolated from 34% (162 of 471) of bovine feces, 4% (16 of 411) of beef samples, 1% (5 of 603) of cheese samples, and 1.5% (10 of 658) of stool specimens. Of the 220 STEC strains isolated, 34 (15%) harbored the
stx
1
gene, 116 (53%) harbored the
stx
2
gene, and 70 (32%) carried both the
stx
1
and
stx
2
genes. However, 32 (14.5%) were not cytotoxic for Vero cells. The
eae
gene, found in 12 (5%) of the 220 strains, was significantly associated with the
stx
1
gene and with isolates from children. Sequences homologous to
ehxA
were found in 102 (46%) of the 220 strains. Thirteen serotypes, OX3:H2, O113:H21, O113:H4, OX3:H21, O6:H10, OX178:H19, O171:H2, O46:H38, O172:H21, O22:H16, O91:H10, O91:H21, and O22:H8, accounted for 102 (55%) of 186 typeable isolates, and only one strain (0.5% of the 186 STEC isolates from cattle), belonged to the O157:H7 serotype. We showed that the majority of the STEC isolates from cattle, beef, and cheese were not likely to be pathogenic for humans and that the STEC strains isolated from children in this study were probably not responsible for diarrheal disease. Finally, the strains associated with hemolytic-uremic syndrome in the same geographical area were shown to belong to particular subsets of the STEC population found in the bovine reservoir.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology