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Pathogenic Escherichia coli

Escherichia coli (/ˌɛʃəˈrɪkiə ˈkl/ ESH-ə-RIK-ee-ə KOH-ly; commonly abbreviated E. coli) is a gram-negative, rod-shaped bacterium that is commonly found in the lower intestine of warm-blooded organisms (endotherms). Most E. coli strains are harmless, but pathogenic varieties cause serious food poisoning, septic shock, meningitis, or urinary tract infections in humans.[1][2] Unlike normal flora E. coli, the pathogenic varieties produce toxins and other virulence factors that enable them to reside in parts of the body normally not inhabited by E. coli, and to damage host cells.[3] These pathogenic traits are encoded by virulence genes carried only by the pathogens.[3]

Pathogenic Escherichia coli
Scientific classification
Domain:
Phylum:
Class:
Order:
Family:
Genus:
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Binomial name
Escherichia coli
(Migula 1895)
Castellani and Chalmers 1919
Synonyms

Bacillus coli communis Escherich 1885

Introduction Edit

E. coli and related bacteria constitute about 0.1% of gut flora,[4] and fecal–oral transmission is the major route through which pathogenic strains of the bacterium cause disease. Cells are able to survive outside the body for only a limited amount of time, which makes them ideal indicator organisms to test environmental samples for fecal contamination.[5][6] The bacterium can also be grown easily and inexpensively in a laboratory setting, and has been intensively investigated for over 60 years. E. coli is the most widely studied prokaryotic model organism, and an important species in the fields of biotechnology and microbiology, where it has served as the host organism for the majority of work with recombinant DNA.

German paediatrician and bacteriologist Theodor Escherich discovered E. coli in 1885,[5] and it is now classified as part of the Gammaproteobacterial family Enterobacteriaceae.[7]

Serotypes Edit

 
Structure of a lipopolysaccharide

Pathogenic E. coli strains can be categorized based on elements that can elicit an immune response in animals, namely:[citation needed]

  1. O antigen: part of lipopolysaccharide layer
  2. K antigen: capsule
  3. H antigen: flagellin

For example, E. coli strain EDL933 is of the O157:H7 group.

O antigen Edit

The outer membrane of an E. coli cell contains millions of lipopolysaccharide (LPS) molecules, which consists of:[citation needed]

  1. O antigen, a polymer of immunogenic repeating oligosaccharides (1–40 units)
  2. Core region of phosphorylated nonrepeating oligosaccharides
  3. Lipid A (endotoxin)

The O antigen is used for serotyping E. coli and these O group designations go from O1 to O181, with the exception of some groups which have been historically removed, namely O31, O47, O67, O72, O93 (now K84), O94, and O122; groups 174 to 181 are provisional (O174=OX3 and O175=OX7) or are under investigation (176 to 181 are STEC/VTEC).[8] Additionally subtypes exist for many O groups (e.g. O128ab and O128ac).[8] Antibodies towards several O antigens cross-react with other O antigens and partially to K antigens not only from E. coli, but also from other Escherichia species and Enterobacteriaceae species.[8]

The O antigen is encoded by the rfb gene cluster. rol (cld) gene encodes the regulator of lipopolysaccharide O-chain length.[citation needed]

K antigen Edit

The acidic capsular polysaccharide (CPS) is a thick, mucous-like, layer of polysaccharide that surrounds some pathogen E. coli.[citation needed]

There are two separate groups of K-antigen groups, named group I and group II (while a small in-between subset (K3, K10, and K54/K96) has been classified as group III).[8] The former (I) consist of 100 kDa (large) capsular polysaccharides, while the latter (II), associated with extraintestinal diseases, are under 50 kDa in size.[8]

Group I K antigens are only found with certain O-antigens (O8, O9, O20, and O101 groups), they are further subdivided on the basis of absence (IA, similar to that of Klebsiella species in structure) or presence (IB) of amino sugars and some group I K-antigens are attached to the lipid A-core of the lipopolysaccharide (KLPS), in a similar way to O antigens (and being structurally identical to O antigens in some instances are only considered as K antigens when co-expressed with another authentic O antigen).[8]

Group II K antigens closely resemble those in gram-positive bacteria and greatly differ in composition and are further subdivided according to their acidic components, generally 20–50% of the CPS chains are bound to phospholipids.[8]

In total there are 60 different K antigens that have been recognized (K1, K2a/ac, K3, K4, K5, K6, K7 (=K56), K8, K9 (=O104), K10, K11, K12 (K82), K13(=K20 and =K23), K14, K15, K16, K18a, K18ab (=K22), K19, K24, K26, K27, K28, K29, K30, K31, K34, K37, K39, K40, K41, K42, K43, K44, K45, K46, K47, K49 (O46), K50, K51, K52, K53, K54 (=K96), K55, K74, K84, K85ab/ac (=O141), K87 (=O32), K92, K93, K95, K97, K98, K100, K101, K102, K103, KX104, KX105, and KX106).[citation needed]

H antigen Edit

The H antigen is a major component of flagella, involved in E. coli movement. It is generally encoded by the fliC gene[citation needed]

There are 53 identified H antigens, numbered from H1 to H56 (H13 and H22 were not E. coli antigens but from Citrobacter freundii, and H50 was found to be the same as H10).[9]

Role in disease Edit

In humans and in domestic animals, virulent strains of E. coli can cause various diseases.[citation needed]

In humans : gastroenteritis, urinary tract infections, and neonatal meningitis. In rarer cases, virulent strains are also responsible for hemolytic-uremic syndrome, peritonitis, mastitis, septicaemia and gram-negative pneumonia.[10]

Gastrointestinal infection Edit

 
Low-temperature electron micrograph of a cluster of E. coli bacteria, magnified 10,000 times. Each individual bacterium is a rounded cylinder.

Certain strains of E. coli, such as O157:H7, O104:H4, O121, O26, O103, O111, O145, and O104:H21, produce potentially lethal toxins. Food poisoning caused by E. coli can result from eating unwashed vegetables or poorly butchered and undercooked meat.[citation needed]

O157:H7 is also notorious for causing serious and even life-threatening complications such as hemolytic-uremic syndrome. This particular strain is linked to the 2006 United States E. coli outbreak due to fresh spinach.[citation needed]

The O104:H4 strain is equally virulent. Antibiotic and supportive treatment protocols for it are not as well-developed (it has the ability to be very enterohemorrhagic like O157:H7, causing bloody diarrhea, but also is more enteroaggregative, meaning it adheres well and clumps to intestinal membranes). It is the strain behind the deadly June 2011 E. coli outbreak in Europe. Severity of the illness varies considerably; it can be fatal, particularly to young children, the elderly or the immunocompromised, but is more often mild.[citation needed]

Earlier, poor hygienic methods of preparing meat in Scotland killed seven people in 1996 due to E. coli poisoning, and left hundreds more infected.[citation needed]

E. coli can harbour both heat-stable and heat-labile enterotoxins. The latter, termed LT, contain one A subunit and five B subunits arranged into one holotoxin, and are highly similar in structure and function to cholera toxins. The B subunits assist in adherence and entry of the toxin into host intestinal cells, while the A subunit is cleaved and prevents cells from absorbing water, causing diarrhea. LT is secreted by the Type 2 secretion pathway.[11]

If E. coli bacteria escape the intestinal tract through a perforation (for example from an ulcer, a ruptured appendix, or due to a surgical error) and enter the abdomen, they usually cause peritonitis that can be fatal without prompt treatment. However, E. coli are extremely sensitive to such antibiotics as streptomycin or gentamicin. Recent research suggests treatment of enteropathogenic E. coli with antibiotics may significantly increase the chance of developing haemolytic-uremic syndrome.[12]

Intestinal mucosa-associated E. coli are observed in increased numbers in the inflammatory bowel diseases, Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis.[13] Invasive strains of E. coli exist in high numbers in the inflamed tissue, and the number of bacteria in the inflamed regions correlates to the severity of the bowel inflammation.[14]

Gastrointestinal infections can cause the body to develop memory T cells to attack gut microbes that are in the intestinal tract. Food poisoning can trigger an immune response to microbial gut bacteria. Some researchers suggest that it can lead to inflammatory bowel disease.[15]

Virulence properties Edit

Enteric E. coli (EC) are classified on the basis of serological characteristics and virulence properties.[10] The major pathotypes of E. coli that cause diarrhea are listed below.[16]

Name Hosts Type of diarrhea Description
Enterotoxigenic
E. coli
(ETEC)
causative agent of diarrhea (without fever) in humans, pigs, sheep, goats, cattle, dogs, and horses Watery ETEC uses various colonization factors (CFs) to bind enterocyte cells in the small intestine. ETEC can produce two proteinaceous enterotoxins:
  • The larger of the two proteins, LT enterotoxin, is similar to cholera toxin in structure and function.
  • The smaller protein, ST enterotoxin causes cGMP accumulation in the target cells and a subsequent secretion of fluid and electrolytes into the intestinal lumen.

ETEC strains are noninvasive, and they do not leave the intestinal lumen. ETEC is the leading bacterial cause of diarrhea in children in the developing world, as well as the most common cause of traveler's diarrhea. Each year, there are estimated to be 840 million cases of ETEC in developing countries. About 280 million of these cases, as well as 325,000 deaths, are in children under the age of five.[16]

Enteropathogenic E. coli (EPEC) causative agent of diarrhea in humans, rabbits, dogs, cats and horses Watery Like ETEC, EPEC also causes diarrhea, but the molecular mechanisms of colonization and aetiology are different. EPEC lack ST and LT toxins, but they use an adhesin known as intimin to bind host intestinal cells. This pathotype has an array of virulence factors that are similar to those found in Shigella. Adherence to the intestinal mucosa causes a rearrangement of actin in the host cell, causing significant deformation. EPEC cells are moderately invasive (i.e. they enter host cells) and elicit an inflammatory response. Changes in intestinal cell ultrastructure due to "attachment and effacement" is likely the prime cause of diarrhea in those afflicted with EPEC.
Enteroaggregative
E. coli
(EAEC)
found only in humans Watery So named because they have fimbriae which aggregate tissue culture cells, EAEC bind to the intestinal mucosa to cause watery diarrhea without fever. EAEC are noninvasive. They produce a hemolysin and an ST enterotoxin similar to that of ETEC.
Enteroinvasive
E. coli
(EIEC)
found only in humans Bloody or nonbloody EIEC infection causes a syndrome that is identical to shigellosis, with profuse diarrhea and high fever.
Enterohemorrhagic
E. coli
(EHEC)
found in humans, cattle, and goats Bloody or nonbloody The most infamous member of this pathotype is strain O157:H7, which causes bloody diarrhea and no fever. EHEC can cause hemolytic-uremic syndrome and sudden kidney failure. It uses bacterial fimbriae for attachment (E. coli common pilus, ECP),[17] is moderately invasive and possesses a phage-encoded shiga toxin that can elicit an intense inflammatory response.
Adherent-Invasive E. coli (AIEC) found in humans - AIEC are able to invade intestinal epithelial cells and replicate intracellularly. It is likely that AIEC are able to proliferate more effectively in hosts with defective innate immunity. They are associated with the ileal mucosa in Crohn's disease.[18]

Epidemiology of gastrointestinal infection Edit

Transmission of pathogenic E. coli often occurs via fecal–oral transmission.[19][20][21] Common routes of transmission include: unhygienic food preparation,[20] farm contamination due to manure fertilization,[22] irrigation of crops with contaminated greywater or raw sewage,[23] feral pigs on cropland,[24] or direct consumption of sewage-contaminated water.[25] Dairy and beef cattle are primary reservoirs of E. coli O157:H7,[26] and they can carry it asymptomatically and shed it in their feces.[26] Food products associated with E. coli outbreaks include cucumber,[27] raw ground beef,[28] raw seed sprouts or spinach,[22] raw milk, unpasteurized juice, unpasteurized cheese and foods contaminated by infected food workers via fecal–oral route.[20]

According to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, the fecal-oral cycle of transmission can be disrupted by cooking food properly, preventing cross-contamination, instituting barriers such as gloves for food workers, instituting health care policies so food industry employees seek treatment when they are ill, pasteurization of juice or dairy products and proper hand washing requirements.[20]

Shiga toxin-producing E. coli (STEC), specifically serotype O157:H7, have also been transmitted by flies,[29][30][31] as well as direct contact with farm animals,[32][33] petting zoo animals,[34] and airborne particles found in animal-rearing environments.[35]

Urinary tract infection Edit

 
E. coli bacteria

Uropathogenic E. coli (UPEC) is responsible for approximately 90% of urinary tract infections (UTI) seen in individuals with ordinary anatomy.[10] In ascending infections, fecal bacteria colonize the urethra and spread up the urinary tract to the bladder as well as to the kidneys (causing pyelonephritis),[36] or the prostate in males. Because women have a shorter urethra than men, they are 14 times more likely to suffer from an ascending UTI.[10]

Uropathogenic E. coli use P fimbriae (pyelonephritis-associated pili) to bind urinary tract urothelial cells and colonize the bladder. These adhesins specifically bind D-galactose-D-galactose moieties on the P blood-group antigen of erythrocytes and uroepithelial cells.[10] Approximately 1% of the human population lacks this receptor,[citation needed] and its presence or absence dictates an individual's susceptibility or non-susceptibility, respectively, to E. coli urinary tract infections. Uropathogenic E. coli produce alpha- and beta-hemolysins, which cause lysis of urinary tract cells.[citation needed]

Another virulence factor commonly present in UPEC is the Dr family of adhesins, which are particularly associated with cystitis and pregnancy-associated pyelonephritis.[37] The Dr adhesins bind Dr blood group antigen (Dra) which is present on decay accelerating factor (DAF) on erythrocytes and other cell types. There, the Dr adhesins induce the development of long cellular extensions that wrap around the bacteria, accompanied by the activation of several signal transduction cascades, including activation of PI-3 kinase.[37]

UPEC can evade the body's innate immune defences (e.g. the complement system) by invading superficial umbrella cells to form intracellular bacterial communities (IBCs).[38] They also have the ability to form K antigen, capsular polysaccharides that contribute to biofilm formation. Biofilm-producing E. coli are recalcitrant to immune factors and antibiotic therapy, and are often responsible for chronic urinary tract infections.[39] K antigen-producing E. coli infections are commonly found in the upper urinary tract.[10]

Descending infections, though relatively rare, occur when E. coli cells enter the upper urinary tract organs (kidneys, bladder or ureters) from the blood stream.[citation needed]

Neonatal meningitis (NMEC) Edit

It is produced by a serotype of Escherichia coli that contains a capsular antigen called K1. The colonization of the newborn's intestines with these strains, that are present in the mother's vagina, lead to bacteremia, which leads to meningitis.[40] And because of the absence of the IgM antibodies from the mother (these do not cross the placenta because FcRn only mediates the transfer of IgG), plus the fact that the body recognizes as self the K1 antigen, as it resembles the cerebral glycopeptides, this leads to a severe meningitis in the neonates.[citation needed]

Possible role in colorectal cancer Edit

Some E. coli strains contain a polyketide synthase genomic island (pks), which encodes a multi-enzymatic machinery that produces colibactin, a substance that damages DNA. About 20% of humans are colonized with E. coli that harbor the pks island.[41] Colibactin can cause cellular senescence[42] or cancer by damaging DNA.[43] However, the mucosal barrier prevents E. coli from reaching the surface of enterocytes. Mucin production diminishes in the presence of inflammation.[44] Only when some inflammatory condition co-occurs with E. coli infection is the bacterium able to deliver colibactin to enterocytes and induce tumorogenesis.[45]

Animal diseases Edit

In animals, virulent strains of E. coli are responsible of a variety of diseases, among others sepsis and diarrhea in newborn calves, acute mastitis in dairy cows, colibacillosis also associated with chronic respiratory disease with Mycoplasma where it causes perihepatitis, pericarditis, septicaemic lungs, peritonitis etc. in poultry, and Alabama rot in dogs.[citation needed]

Most of the serotypes isolated from poultry are pathogenic only for birds. So avian sources of E. coli do not seem to be important sources of infections in other animals.[46]

Laboratory diagnosis Edit

Diagnosis of infectious diarrhea and identification of antimicrobial resistance is performed using a stool culture with subsequent antibiotic sensitivity testing. It requires a minimum of 2 days and maximum of several weeks to culture gastrointestinal pathogens. The sensitivity (true positive) and specificity (true negative) rates for stool culture vary by pathogen, although a number of human pathogens can not be cultured. For culture-positive samples, antimicrobial resistance testing takes an additional 12–24 hours to perform.[citation needed]

Current point of care molecular diagnostic tests can identify E. coli and antimicrobial resistance in the identified strains much faster than culture and sensitivity testing. Microarray-based platforms can identify specific pathogenic strains of E. coli and E. coli-specific AMR genes in two hours or less with high sensitivity and specificity, but the size of the test panel (i.e., total pathogens and antimicrobial resistance genes) is limited. Newer metagenomics-based infectious disease diagnostic platforms are currently being developed to overcome the various limitations of culture and all currently available molecular diagnostic technologies.[citation needed]

In stool samples, microscopy will show gram-negative rods, with no particular cell arrangement. Then, either MacConkey agar or EMB agar (or both) are inoculated with the stool. On MacConkey agar, deep red colonies are produced, as the organism is lactose-positive, and fermentation of this sugar will cause the medium's pH to drop, leading to darkening of the medium. Growth on EMB agar produces black colonies with a greenish-black metallic sheen. This is diagnostic of E. coli. The organism is also lysine positive, and grows on TSI slant with a (A/A/g+/H2S-) profile. Also, IMViC is {+ + – -} for E. coli; as it is indole-positive (red ring) and methyl red-positive (bright red), but VP-negative (no change-colourless) and citrate-negative (no change-green colour). Tests for toxin production can use mammalian cells in tissue culture, which are rapidly killed by shiga toxin. Although sensitive and very specific, this method is slow and expensive.[47]

Typically, diagnosis has been done by culturing on sorbitol-MacConkey medium and then using typing antiserum. However, current latex assays and some typing antisera have shown cross reactions with non-E. coli O157 colonies. Furthermore, not all E. coli O157 strains associated with HUS are nonsorbitol fermentors.

The Council of State and Territorial Epidemiologists recommend that clinical laboratories screen at least all bloody stools for this pathogen. The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommend that "all stools submitted for routine testing from patients with acute community-acquired diarrhea (regardless of patient age, season of the year, or presence or absence of blood in the stool) be simultaneously cultured for E. coli O157:H7 (O157 STEC) and tested with an assay that detects Shiga toxins to detect non-O157 STEC".[48][49]

Antibiotic therapy and resistance Edit

Bacterial infections are usually treated with antibiotics. However, the antibiotic sensitivities of different strains of E. coli vary widely. As gram-negative organisms, E. coli are resistant to many antibiotics that are effective against gram-positive organisms. Antibiotics which may be used to treat E. coli infection include amoxicillin, as well as other semisynthetic penicillins, many cephalosporins, carbapenems, aztreonam, trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole, ciprofloxacin, nitrofurantoin and the aminoglycosides.[citation needed]

Antibiotic resistance is a growing problem. Some of this is due to overuse of antibiotics in humans, but some of it is probably due to the use of antibiotics as growth promoters in animal feeds.[50] A study published in the journal Science in August 2007 found the rate of adaptative mutations in E. coli is "on the order of 10−5 per genome per generation, which is 1,000 times as high as previous estimates," a finding which may have significance for the study and management of bacterial antibiotic resistance.[51]

Antibiotic-resistant E. coli may also pass on the genes responsible for antibiotic resistance to other species of bacteria, such as Staphylococcus aureus, through a process called horizontal gene transfer. E. coli bacteria often carry multiple drug resistance plasmids, and under stress, readily transfer those plasmids to other species. Mixing of species in the intestines allows E. coli to accept and transfer plasmids from and to other bacteria. Thus, E. coli and the other enterobacteria are important reservoirs of transferable antibiotic resistance.[52]

Beta-lactamase strains Edit

Resistance to beta-lactam antibiotics has become a particular problem in recent decades, as strains of bacteria that produce extended-spectrum beta-lactamases have become more common.[53] These beta-lactamase enzymes make many, if not all, of the penicillins and cephalosporins ineffective as therapy. Extended-spectrum beta-lactamase–producing E. coli (ESBL E. coli) are highly resistant to an array of antibiotics, and infections by these strains are difficult to treat. In many instances, only two oral antibiotics and a very limited group of intravenous antibiotics remain effective. In 2009, a gene called New Delhi metallo-beta-lactamase (shortened NDM-1) that even gives resistance to intravenous antibiotic carbapenem, were discovered in India and Pakistan on E. coli bacteria.[citation needed]

Increased concern about the prevalence of this form of "superbug" in the United Kingdom has led to calls for further monitoring and a UK-wide strategy to deal with infections and the deaths.[54] Susceptibility testing should guide treatment in all infections in which the organism can be isolated for culture.[citation needed]

Phage therapy Edit

Phage therapy—viruses that specifically target pathogenic bacteria—has been developed over the last 80 years, primarily in the former Soviet Union, where it was used to prevent diarrhea caused by E. coli.[55] Presently, phage therapy for humans is available only at the Phage Therapy Center in the Republic of Georgia and in Poland.[56] However, on January 2, 2007, the United States FDA gave Omnilytics approval to apply its E. coli O157:H7 killing phage in a mist, spray or wash on live animals that will be slaughtered for human consumption.[57] The enterobacteria phage T4, a highly studied phage, targets E. coli for infection.[citation needed]

While phage therapy as a treatment for E. coli is unavailable in the US, some commercially available dietary supplements contain strains of phage that target E. coli and have been shown to reduce E. coli load in healthy subjects.[58] This is not considered phage therapy, however, because it does not involve selection of phages with activity against a patient's specific strain of bacterium.[citation needed]

Vaccination Edit

Researchers have actively been working to develop safe, effective vaccines to lower the worldwide incidence of E. coli infection.[59] In March 2006, a vaccine eliciting an immune response against the E. coli O157:H7 O-specific polysaccharide conjugated to recombinant exotoxin A of Pseudomonas aeruginosa (O157-rEPA) was reported to be safe in children two to five years old. Previous work had already indicated it was safe for adults.[60] A phase III clinical trial to verify the large-scale efficacy of the treatment is planned.[60]

In 2006, Fort Dodge Animal Health (Wyeth) introduced an effective, live, attenuated vaccine to control airsacculitis and peritonitis in chickens. The vaccine is a genetically modified avirulent vaccine that has demonstrated protection against O78 and untypeable strains.[61]

In January 2007, the Canadian biopharmaceutical company Bioniche announced it has developed a cattle vaccine which reduces the number of O157:H7 shed in manure by a factor of 1000, to about 1000 pathogenic bacteria per gram of manure.[62][63][64]

In April 2009, a Michigan State University researcher announced he had developed a working vaccine for a strain of E. coli. Dr. Mahdi Saeed, Professor of epidemiology and infectious disease in MSU's colleges of Veterinary Medicine and Human Medicine, has applied for a patent for his discovery and has made contact with pharmaceutical companies for commercial production.[65]

In May 2018, a team led by researchers at Washington University School of Medicine collaborated with Johns Hopkins University to conduct a study which delves deeper into the known link between blood type and the severity of E. coli infection.[66] Results of the study showed that "the bacterium is more likely to cause severe diarrhea in people with type A blood," and this finding may aid current and future efforts to develop an effective vaccine against the pathogenic strains of E. coli.[66][67]

See also Edit

References Edit

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External links Edit

  • The danger in our salad bowls - Boston Globe report on FDA oversight of outbreaks in the United States

pathogenic, escherichia, coli, escherichia, coli, general, escherichia, coli, escherichia, coli, molecular, biology, escherichia, coli, molecular, biology, this, article, lead, section, short, adequately, summarize, points, please, consider, expanding, lead, p. For Escherichia coli in general see Escherichia coli For Escherichia coli in molecular biology see Escherichia coli molecular biology This article s lead section may be too short to adequately summarize the key points Please consider expanding the lead to provide an accessible overview of all important aspects of the article March 2022 Escherichia coli ˌ ɛ ʃ e ˈ r ɪ k i e ˈ k oʊ l aɪ ESH e RIK ee e KOH ly commonly abbreviated E coli is a gram negative rod shaped bacterium that is commonly found in the lower intestine of warm blooded organisms endotherms Most E coli strains are harmless but pathogenic varieties cause serious food poisoning septic shock meningitis or urinary tract infections in humans 1 2 Unlike normal flora E coli the pathogenic varieties produce toxins and other virulence factors that enable them to reside in parts of the body normally not inhabited by E coli and to damage host cells 3 These pathogenic traits are encoded by virulence genes carried only by the pathogens 3 Pathogenic Escherichia coliScientific classificationDomain BacteriaPhylum PseudomonadotaClass GammaproteobacteriaOrder EnterobacterialesFamily EnterobacteriaceaeGenus EscherichiaSpecies E coliBinomial nameEscherichia coli Migula 1895 Castellani and Chalmers 1919SynonymsBacillus coli communis Escherich 1885 Contents 1 Introduction 2 Serotypes 2 1 O antigen 2 2 K antigen 2 3 H antigen 3 Role in disease 3 1 Gastrointestinal infection 3 1 1 Virulence properties 3 1 2 Epidemiology of gastrointestinal infection 3 2 Urinary tract infection 3 3 Neonatal meningitis NMEC 3 4 Possible role in colorectal cancer 3 5 Animal diseases 4 Laboratory diagnosis 5 Antibiotic therapy and resistance 5 1 Beta lactamase strains 6 Phage therapy 7 Vaccination 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksIntroduction EditE coli and related bacteria constitute about 0 1 of gut flora 4 and fecal oral transmission is the major route through which pathogenic strains of the bacterium cause disease Cells are able to survive outside the body for only a limited amount of time which makes them ideal indicator organisms to test environmental samples for fecal contamination 5 6 The bacterium can also be grown easily and inexpensively in a laboratory setting and has been intensively investigated for over 60 years E coli is the most widely studied prokaryotic model organism and an important species in the fields of biotechnology and microbiology where it has served as the host organism for the majority of work with recombinant DNA German paediatrician and bacteriologist Theodor Escherich discovered E coli in 1885 5 and it is now classified as part of the Gammaproteobacterial family Enterobacteriaceae 7 Serotypes Edit nbsp Structure of a lipopolysaccharidePathogenic E coli strains can be categorized based on elements that can elicit an immune response in animals namely citation needed O antigen part of lipopolysaccharide layer K antigen capsule H antigen flagellinFor example E coli strain EDL933 is of the O157 H7 group O antigen Edit Main article O antigen The outer membrane of an E coli cell contains millions of lipopolysaccharide LPS molecules which consists of citation needed O antigen a polymer of immunogenic repeating oligosaccharides 1 40 units Core region of phosphorylated nonrepeating oligosaccharides Lipid A endotoxin The O antigen is used for serotyping E coli and these O group designations go from O1 to O181 with the exception of some groups which have been historically removed namely O31 O47 O67 O72 O93 now K84 O94 and O122 groups 174 to 181 are provisional O174 OX3 and O175 OX7 or are under investigation 176 to 181 are STEC VTEC 8 Additionally subtypes exist for many O groups e g O128ab and O128ac 8 Antibodies towards several O antigens cross react with other O antigens and partially to K antigens not only from E coli but also from other Escherichia species and Enterobacteriaceae species 8 The O antigen is encoded by the rfb gene cluster rol cld gene encodes the regulator of lipopolysaccharide O chain length citation needed K antigen Edit See also Polysaccharide Bacterial capsular polysaccharides The acidic capsular polysaccharide CPS is a thick mucous like layer of polysaccharide that surrounds some pathogen E coli citation needed There are two separate groups of K antigen groups named group I and group II while a small in between subset K3 K10 and K54 K96 has been classified as group III 8 The former I consist of 100 kDa large capsular polysaccharides while the latter II associated with extraintestinal diseases are under 50 kDa in size 8 Group I K antigens are only found with certain O antigens O8 O9 O20 and O101 groups they are further subdivided on the basis of absence IA similar to that of Klebsiella species in structure or presence IB of amino sugars and some group I K antigens are attached to the lipid A core of the lipopolysaccharide KLPS in a similar way to O antigens and being structurally identical to O antigens in some instances are only considered as K antigens when co expressed with another authentic O antigen 8 Group II K antigens closely resemble those in gram positive bacteria and greatly differ in composition and are further subdivided according to their acidic components generally 20 50 of the CPS chains are bound to phospholipids 8 In total there are 60 different K antigens that have been recognized K1 K2a ac K3 K4 K5 K6 K7 K56 K8 K9 O104 K10 K11 K12 K82 K13 K20 and K23 K14 K15 K16 K18a K18ab K22 K19 K24 K26 K27 K28 K29 K30 K31 K34 K37 K39 K40 K41 K42 K43 K44 K45 K46 K47 K49 O46 K50 K51 K52 K53 K54 K96 K55 K74 K84 K85ab ac O141 K87 O32 K92 K93 K95 K97 K98 K100 K101 K102 K103 KX104 KX105 and KX106 citation needed H antigen Edit See also flagella The H antigen is a major component of flagella involved in E coli movement It is generally encoded by the fliC gene citation needed There are 53 identified H antigens numbered from H1 to H56 H13 and H22 were not E coli antigens but from Citrobacter freundii and H50 was found to be the same as H10 9 Role in disease EditIn humans and in domestic animals virulent strains of E coli can cause various diseases citation needed In humans gastroenteritis urinary tract infections and neonatal meningitis In rarer cases virulent strains are also responsible for hemolytic uremic syndrome peritonitis mastitis septicaemia and gram negative pneumonia 10 Gastrointestinal infection Edit nbsp Low temperature electron micrograph of a cluster of E coli bacteria magnified 10 000 times Each individual bacterium is a rounded cylinder Certain strains of E coli such as O157 H7 O104 H4 O121 O26 O103 O111 O145 and O104 H21 produce potentially lethal toxins Food poisoning caused by E coli can result from eating unwashed vegetables or poorly butchered and undercooked meat citation needed O157 H7 is also notorious for causing serious and even life threatening complications such as hemolytic uremic syndrome This particular strain is linked to the 2006 United States E coli outbreak due to fresh spinach citation needed The O104 H4 strain is equally virulent Antibiotic and supportive treatment protocols for it are not as well developed it has the ability to be very enterohemorrhagic like O157 H7 causing bloody diarrhea but also is more enteroaggregative meaning it adheres well and clumps to intestinal membranes It is the strain behind the deadly June 2011 E coli outbreak in Europe Severity of the illness varies considerably it can be fatal particularly to young children the elderly or the immunocompromised but is more often mild citation needed Earlier poor hygienic methods of preparing meat in Scotland killed seven people in 1996 due to E coli poisoning and left hundreds more infected citation needed E coli can harbour both heat stable and heat labile enterotoxins The latter termed LT contain one A subunit and five B subunits arranged into one holotoxin and are highly similar in structure and function to cholera toxins The B subunits assist in adherence and entry of the toxin into host intestinal cells while the A subunit is cleaved and prevents cells from absorbing water causing diarrhea LT is secreted by the Type 2 secretion pathway 11 If E coli bacteria escape the intestinal tract through a perforation for example from an ulcer a ruptured appendix or due to a surgical error and enter the abdomen they usually cause peritonitis that can be fatal without prompt treatment However E coli are extremely sensitive to such antibiotics as streptomycin or gentamicin Recent research suggests treatment of enteropathogenic E coli with antibiotics may significantly increase the chance of developing haemolytic uremic syndrome 12 Intestinal mucosa associated E coli are observed in increased numbers in the inflammatory bowel diseases Crohn s disease and ulcerative colitis 13 Invasive strains of E coli exist in high numbers in the inflamed tissue and the number of bacteria in the inflamed regions correlates to the severity of the bowel inflammation 14 Gastrointestinal infections can cause the body to develop memory T cells to attack gut microbes that are in the intestinal tract Food poisoning can trigger an immune response to microbial gut bacteria Some researchers suggest that it can lead to inflammatory bowel disease 15 Virulence properties Edit Enteric E coli EC are classified on the basis of serological characteristics and virulence properties 10 The major pathotypes of E coli that cause diarrhea are listed below 16 Name Hosts Type of diarrhea DescriptionEnterotoxigenicE coli ETEC causative agent of diarrhea without fever in humans pigs sheep goats cattle dogs and horses Watery ETEC uses various colonization factors CFs to bind enterocyte cells in the small intestine ETEC can produce two proteinaceous enterotoxins The larger of the two proteins LT enterotoxin is similar to cholera toxin in structure and function The smaller protein ST enterotoxin causes cGMP accumulation in the target cells and a subsequent secretion of fluid and electrolytes into the intestinal lumen ETEC strains are noninvasive and they do not leave the intestinal lumen ETEC is the leading bacterial cause of diarrhea in children in the developing world as well as the most common cause of traveler s diarrhea Each year there are estimated to be 840 million cases of ETEC in developing countries About 280 million of these cases as well as 325 000 deaths are in children under the age of five 16 Enteropathogenic E coli EPEC causative agent of diarrhea in humans rabbits dogs cats and horses Watery Like ETEC EPEC also causes diarrhea but the molecular mechanisms of colonization and aetiology are different EPEC lack ST and LT toxins but they use an adhesin known as intimin to bind host intestinal cells This pathotype has an array of virulence factors that are similar to those found in Shigella Adherence to the intestinal mucosa causes a rearrangement of actin in the host cell causing significant deformation EPEC cells are moderately invasive i e they enter host cells and elicit an inflammatory response Changes in intestinal cell ultrastructure due to attachment and effacement is likely the prime cause of diarrhea in those afflicted with EPEC EnteroaggregativeE coli EAEC found only in humans Watery So named because they have fimbriae which aggregate tissue culture cells EAEC bind to the intestinal mucosa to cause watery diarrhea without fever EAEC are noninvasive They produce a hemolysin and an ST enterotoxin similar to that of ETEC EnteroinvasiveE coli EIEC found only in humans Bloody or nonbloody EIEC infection causes a syndrome that is identical to shigellosis with profuse diarrhea and high fever EnterohemorrhagicE coli EHEC found in humans cattle and goats Bloody or nonbloody The most infamous member of this pathotype is strain O157 H7 which causes bloody diarrhea and no fever EHEC can cause hemolytic uremic syndrome and sudden kidney failure It uses bacterial fimbriae for attachment E coli common pilus ECP 17 is moderately invasive and possesses a phage encoded shiga toxin that can elicit an intense inflammatory response Adherent Invasive E coli AIEC found in humans AIEC are able to invade intestinal epithelial cells and replicate intracellularly It is likely that AIEC are able to proliferate more effectively in hosts with defective innate immunity They are associated with the ileal mucosa in Crohn s disease 18 Epidemiology of gastrointestinal infection Edit Transmission of pathogenic E coli often occurs via fecal oral transmission 19 20 21 Common routes of transmission include unhygienic food preparation 20 farm contamination due to manure fertilization 22 irrigation of crops with contaminated greywater or raw sewage 23 feral pigs on cropland 24 or direct consumption of sewage contaminated water 25 Dairy and beef cattle are primary reservoirs of E coli O157 H7 26 and they can carry it asymptomatically and shed it in their feces 26 Food products associated with E coli outbreaks include cucumber 27 raw ground beef 28 raw seed sprouts or spinach 22 raw milk unpasteurized juice unpasteurized cheese and foods contaminated by infected food workers via fecal oral route 20 According to the U S Food and Drug Administration the fecal oral cycle of transmission can be disrupted by cooking food properly preventing cross contamination instituting barriers such as gloves for food workers instituting health care policies so food industry employees seek treatment when they are ill pasteurization of juice or dairy products and proper hand washing requirements 20 Shiga toxin producing E coli STEC specifically serotype O157 H7 have also been transmitted by flies 29 30 31 as well as direct contact with farm animals 32 33 petting zoo animals 34 and airborne particles found in animal rearing environments 35 Urinary tract infection Edit nbsp E coli bacteriaUropathogenic E coli UPEC is responsible for approximately 90 of urinary tract infections UTI seen in individuals with ordinary anatomy 10 In ascending infections fecal bacteria colonize the urethra and spread up the urinary tract to the bladder as well as to the kidneys causing pyelonephritis 36 or the prostate in males Because women have a shorter urethra than men they are 14 times more likely to suffer from an ascending UTI 10 Uropathogenic E coli use P fimbriae pyelonephritis associated pili to bind urinary tract urothelial cells and colonize the bladder These adhesins specifically bind D galactose D galactose moieties on the P blood group antigen of erythrocytes and uroepithelial cells 10 Approximately 1 of the human population lacks this receptor citation needed and its presence or absence dictates an individual s susceptibility or non susceptibility respectively to E coli urinary tract infections Uropathogenic E coli produce alpha and beta hemolysins which cause lysis of urinary tract cells citation needed Another virulence factor commonly present in UPEC is the Dr family of adhesins which are particularly associated with cystitis and pregnancy associated pyelonephritis 37 The Dr adhesins bind Dr blood group antigen Dra which is present on decay accelerating factor DAF on erythrocytes and other cell types There the Dr adhesins induce the development of long cellular extensions that wrap around the bacteria accompanied by the activation of several signal transduction cascades including activation of PI 3 kinase 37 UPEC can evade the body s innate immune defences e g the complement system by invading superficial umbrella cells to form intracellular bacterial communities IBCs 38 They also have the ability to form K antigen capsular polysaccharides that contribute to biofilm formation Biofilm producing E coli are recalcitrant to immune factors and antibiotic therapy and are often responsible for chronic urinary tract infections 39 K antigen producing E coli infections are commonly found in the upper urinary tract 10 Descending infections though relatively rare occur when E coli cells enter the upper urinary tract organs kidneys bladder or ureters from the blood stream citation needed Neonatal meningitis NMEC Edit It is produced by a serotype of Escherichia coli that contains a capsular antigen called K1 The colonization of the newborn s intestines with these strains that are present in the mother s vagina lead to bacteremia which leads to meningitis 40 And because of the absence of the IgM antibodies from the mother these do not cross the placenta because FcRn only mediates the transfer of IgG plus the fact that the body recognizes as self the K1 antigen as it resembles the cerebral glycopeptides this leads to a severe meningitis in the neonates citation needed Possible role in colorectal cancer Edit Some E coli strains contain a polyketide synthase genomic island pks which encodes a multi enzymatic machinery that produces colibactin a substance that damages DNA About 20 of humans are colonized with E coli that harbor the pks island 41 Colibactin can cause cellular senescence 42 or cancer by damaging DNA 43 However the mucosal barrier prevents E coli from reaching the surface of enterocytes Mucin production diminishes in the presence of inflammation 44 Only when some inflammatory condition co occurs with E coli infection is the bacterium able to deliver colibactin to enterocytes and induce tumorogenesis 45 Animal diseases Edit In animals virulent strains of E coli are responsible of a variety of diseases among others sepsis and diarrhea in newborn calves acute mastitis in dairy cows colibacillosis also associated with chronic respiratory disease with Mycoplasma where it causes perihepatitis pericarditis septicaemic lungs peritonitis etc in poultry and Alabama rot in dogs citation needed Most of the serotypes isolated from poultry are pathogenic only for birds So avian sources of E coli do not seem to be important sources of infections in other animals 46 nbsp Colibacillosis in domestic chicken nbsp Mastitis in cowsLaboratory diagnosis EditDiagnosis of infectious diarrhea and identification of antimicrobial resistance is performed using a stool culture with subsequent antibiotic sensitivity testing It requires a minimum of 2 days and maximum of several weeks to culture gastrointestinal pathogens The sensitivity true positive and specificity true negative rates for stool culture vary by pathogen although a number of human pathogens can not be cultured For culture positive samples antimicrobial resistance testing takes an additional 12 24 hours to perform citation needed Current point of care molecular diagnostic tests can identify E coli and antimicrobial resistance in the identified strains much faster than culture and sensitivity testing Microarray based platforms can identify specific pathogenic strains of E coli and E coli specific AMR genes in two hours or less with high sensitivity and specificity but the size of the test panel i e total pathogens and antimicrobial resistance genes is limited Newer metagenomics based infectious disease diagnostic platforms are currently being developed to overcome the various limitations of culture and all currently available molecular diagnostic technologies citation needed In stool samples microscopy will show gram negative rods with no particular cell arrangement Then either MacConkey agar or EMB agar or both are inoculated with the stool On MacConkey agar deep red colonies are produced as the organism is lactose positive and fermentation of this sugar will cause the medium s pH to drop leading to darkening of the medium Growth on EMB agar produces black colonies with a greenish black metallic sheen This is diagnostic of E coli The organism is also lysine positive and grows on TSI slant with a A A g H2S profile Also IMViC is for E coli as it is indole positive red ring and methyl red positive bright red but VP negative no change colourless and citrate negative no change green colour Tests for toxin production can use mammalian cells in tissue culture which are rapidly killed by shiga toxin Although sensitive and very specific this method is slow and expensive 47 Typically diagnosis has been done by culturing on sorbitol MacConkey medium and then using typing antiserum However current latex assays and some typing antisera have shown cross reactions with non E coli O157 colonies Furthermore not all E coli O157 strains associated with HUS are nonsorbitol fermentors The Council of State and Territorial Epidemiologists recommend that clinical laboratories screen at least all bloody stools for this pathogen The U S Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommend that all stools submitted for routine testing from patients with acute community acquired diarrhea regardless of patient age season of the year or presence or absence of blood in the stool be simultaneously cultured for E coli O157 H7 O157 STEC and tested with an assay that detects Shiga toxins to detect non O157 STEC 48 49 Antibiotic therapy and resistance EditMain article Antibiotic resistance Bacterial infections are usually treated with antibiotics However the antibiotic sensitivities of different strains of E coli vary widely As gram negative organisms E coli are resistant to many antibiotics that are effective against gram positive organisms Antibiotics which may be used to treat E coli infection include amoxicillin as well as other semisynthetic penicillins many cephalosporins carbapenems aztreonam trimethoprim sulfamethoxazole ciprofloxacin nitrofurantoin and the aminoglycosides citation needed Antibiotic resistance is a growing problem Some of this is due to overuse of antibiotics in humans but some of it is probably due to the use of antibiotics as growth promoters in animal feeds 50 A study published in the journal Science in August 2007 found the rate of adaptative mutations in E coli is on the order of 10 5 per genome per generation which is 1 000 times as high as previous estimates a finding which may have significance for the study and management of bacterial antibiotic resistance 51 Antibiotic resistant E coli may also pass on the genes responsible for antibiotic resistance to other species of bacteria such as Staphylococcus aureus through a process called horizontal gene transfer E coli bacteria often carry multiple drug resistance plasmids and under stress readily transfer those plasmids to other species Mixing of species in the intestines allows E coli to accept and transfer plasmids from and to other bacteria Thus E coli and the other enterobacteria are important reservoirs of transferable antibiotic resistance 52 Beta lactamase strains Edit Resistance to beta lactam antibiotics has become a particular problem in recent decades as strains of bacteria that produce extended spectrum beta lactamases have become more common 53 These beta lactamase enzymes make many if not all of the penicillins and cephalosporins ineffective as therapy Extended spectrum beta lactamase producing E coli ESBL E coli are highly resistant to an array of antibiotics and infections by these strains are difficult to treat In many instances only two oral antibiotics and a very limited group of intravenous antibiotics remain effective In 2009 a gene called New Delhi metallo beta lactamase shortened NDM 1 that even gives resistance to intravenous antibiotic carbapenem were discovered in India and Pakistan on E coli bacteria citation needed Increased concern about the prevalence of this form of superbug in the United Kingdom has led to calls for further monitoring and a UK wide strategy to deal with infections and the deaths 54 Susceptibility testing should guide treatment in all infections in which the organism can be isolated for culture citation needed Phage therapy EditPhage therapy viruses that specifically target pathogenic bacteria has been developed over the last 80 years primarily in the former Soviet Union where it was used to prevent diarrhea caused by E coli 55 Presently phage therapy for humans is available only at the Phage Therapy Center in the Republic of Georgia and in Poland 56 However on January 2 2007 the United States FDA gave Omnilytics approval to apply its E coli O157 H7 killing phage in a mist spray or wash on live animals that will be slaughtered for human consumption 57 The enterobacteria phage T4 a highly studied phage targets E coli for infection citation needed While phage therapy as a treatment for E coli is unavailable in the US some commercially available dietary supplements contain strains of phage that target E coli and have been shown to reduce E coli load in healthy subjects 58 This is not considered phage therapy however because it does not involve selection of phages with activity against a patient s specific strain of bacterium citation needed Vaccination EditResearchers have actively been working to develop safe effective vaccines to lower the worldwide incidence of E coli infection 59 In March 2006 a vaccine eliciting an immune response against the E coli O157 H7 O specific polysaccharide conjugated to recombinant exotoxin A of Pseudomonas aeruginosa O157 rEPA was reported to be safe in children two to five years old Previous work had already indicated it was safe for adults 60 A phase III clinical trial to verify the large scale efficacy of the treatment is planned 60 In 2006 Fort Dodge Animal Health Wyeth introduced an effective live attenuated vaccine to control airsacculitis and peritonitis in chickens The vaccine is a genetically modified avirulent vaccine that has demonstrated protection against O78 and untypeable strains 61 In January 2007 the Canadian biopharmaceutical company Bioniche announced it has developed a cattle vaccine which reduces the number of O157 H7 shed in manure by a factor of 1000 to about 1000 pathogenic bacteria per gram of manure 62 63 64 In April 2009 a Michigan State University researcher announced he had developed a working vaccine for a strain of E coli Dr Mahdi Saeed Professor of epidemiology and infectious disease in MSU s colleges of Veterinary Medicine and Human Medicine has applied for a patent for his discovery and has made contact with pharmaceutical companies for commercial production 65 In May 2018 a team led by researchers at Washington University School of Medicine collaborated with Johns Hopkins University to conduct a study which delves deeper into the known link between blood type and the severity of E coli infection 66 Results of the study showed that the bacterium is more likely to cause severe diarrhea in people with type A blood and this finding may aid current and future efforts to develop an effective vaccine against the pathogenic strains of E coli 66 67 See also EditList of strains of Escherichia coliReferences Edit Escherichia coli O157 H7 CDC Division of Bacterial and Mycotic Diseases Retrieved 2011 04 19 Vogt RL Dippold L 2005 Escherichia coli O157 H7 outbreak associated with consumption of ground beef June July 2002 Public Health Rep 120 2 174 8 doi 10 1177 003335490512000211 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David A DeNearing Barbara 2018 05 17 Enterotoxigenic Escherichia coli blood group A interactions intensify diarrheal severity Journal of Clinical Investigation 128 8 3298 3311 doi 10 1172 jci97659 ISSN 1558 8238 PMC 6063478 PMID 29771685 External links EditThe danger in our salad bowls Boston Globe report on FDA oversight of outbreaks in the United States Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Pathogenic Escherichia coli amp oldid 1177117782 Virulence properties, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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