dc.description.abstract |
Escherichia coli, a facultative anaerobe is a gram-negative bacteria which normally
inhabits the gut microflora. E. coli is very diverse in nature and mainly act as commensal
bacteria that do not cause disease, but these bacteria can become pathogenic after
acquiring virulence genes by horizontal gene transfer. Pathogenic E. coli can be of two
types that are extraintestinal pathogenic Escherichia coli (ExPEC) or non-extraintestinal
pathogenic Escherichia coli (ExPEC). Extra intestinal pathogenic E. coli cause disease
outside the intestine. ExPEC are very diverse in nature and cause different types of
infection in humans, dairy, and poultry for instance UTI, Colibacillosis and Mastitis
respectively. E. coli strains have a zoonotic risk because some of the ExPEC isolates from
liver of colibacillosis infected chicken have similarities with human ExPEC, that is they
have several virulence and antimicrobial resistance genes in common. Humans may
acquire these genes through a variety of interactions, including as personal contact with
infected birds or through the food chain. However, nothing is known about the precise
rate at which handling or consumption of ExPEC-contaminated food leads to intestinal
colonisation and, eventually, extraintestinal infection from a poultry source. Examining
the zoonotic potential of ExPEC isolates bearing the sub pathotype Avian pathogenic E.
coli, or APEC, is the goal of the research that has been done.
The evaluation of avian pathogenic E. coli isolates that cause colibacillosis in poultry, as
well as the possibility that E. coli strains extracted from the liver of infected chickens can
induce disease in chick models of avian colibacillosis and two mouse models of ExPEC related infections, such as human sepsis and urinary tract infections, are the main foci of
this research.
Through whole genome sequencing (WGS), 139 E. coli from liver source were
categorized into ExPEC and non-ExPEC strains through screening for virulence
associated genes. Based on this screening 54 out of 139 isolates were designated a ExPEC.
Out of these 54, most of them belonged to APEC (45%). Among these isolates, the
prevalent Sequence types were ST-131, ST-155, and ST-69. ST-69 is concerned with
zoonotic infections and ST-155 is concerned with bloodstream infections. O131 and O2
were the prevalent serotypes. The bulk of the isolates from ExPEC belonged to
phylogroups B1, D, and B2. Phylogroups B2 and D are very common phylogroups where
zoonotic infections are concerned. The identified strains underwent screening to
determine if they carried any common VAGS (virulence associated genes) or
antimicrobial resistance genes, which can spread horizontally to other bacteria and
eventually to humans. Almost 99% of the ExPEC isolates contained virulence associated
genes that were associated with causing zoonotic infections. ExPEC isolates from avian
source resembled human ExPEC isolates causing illnesses in humans and chicken through
experimental animal infection models. ExPEC isolates from liver sources were able to
cause colibacillosis in chicken and showed intermediate to high pathogenicity. ExPEC
isolates also caused UTI infection and lethal sepsis in mice models. 2 of the ExPEC
isolates that caused colibacillosis in chick model, caused lethal sepsis in mice and
enormous bacterial counts in mice. Both of these strains belonged to phylogroup D and
ST-69 which were proven to have a zoonotic lineage. These findings suggest that E. coli
isolates from liver source harbor virulence genes that can be transferred to humans and
can pose a severe threat to human health. |
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