Alam, M. ; Nur-A-Hasan, ; Ahsan, S. ; Pazhani, G. P. ; Tamura, K. ; Ramamurthy, T. ; Gomes, D. J. ; Rahman, S. R. ; Islam, A. ; Akhtar, F. ; Shinoda, S. ; Watanabe, H. ; Faruque, S. M. ; Nair, G. B. (2006) Phenotypic and molecular characteristics of Escherichia coli isolated from aquatic environment of Bangladesh Microbiology and Immunology, 50 (5). pp. 359-370. ISSN 0385-5600
Full text not available from this repository.
Official URL: http://www.jstage.jst.go.jp/browse/mandi/
Abstract
Pathogenic Escherichia coli remains important etiological agent of infantile diarrhea in Bangladesh. Previous studies have focused mostly on clinical strains, but very little is known about their presence in aquatic environments. The present study was designed to characterize potentially pathogenic E. coli isolated between November 2001 and December 2003 from aquatic environments of 13 districts of Bangladesh. Serotyping of 96 randomly selected strains revealed O161 to be the predominant serotype (19%), followed by O55 and O44 (12% each), and 11% untypable. Serotype-based pathotyping of the E. coli strains revealed 47%, 30%, and 6% to belong to EPEC, ETEC, and EHEC pathotypes, respectively. The majority of the 160 strains tested were resistant to commonly used antimicrobial agents. Plasmid pro-filing showed a total of 17 different bands ranging from 1.3 to 40 kb. However, 35% of the strains did not contain any detectable plasmid, implying no correlation between plasmid and drug resistance. Although virulence gene profiling revealed 97 (61%) of the strains to harbor the gene encoding heat-stable enterotoxin (ST), 2 for the gene encoding Shiga toxin (Stx), and none for the gene for heat-labile enterotoxin (LT), serotype-based pathotyping of E. coli was not fully supported by this gene profiling. A dendrogram derived from the PFGE patterns of 22 strains of three predominant serogroups indicated two major clusters, one containing mainly serogroup O55 and the other O8. Three strains of identical PFGE profiles belonging to serogroup O55 were isolated from three distinct areas, which may be of epidemiological significance. Finally, it may be concluded that serotype-based pathotyping may be useful for E. coli strains of clinical origin; however, it is not precise enough for reliably identifying environmental strains as diarrheagenic.
Item Type: | Article |
---|---|
Source: | Copyright of this article belongs to Center for Academic Publications, Japan. |
ID Code: | 80631 |
Deposited On: | 01 Feb 2012 12:48 |
Last Modified: | 01 Feb 2012 12:48 |
Repository Staff Only: item control page