Adherence of Escherichia coli O157:H7 mutants in vitro and in ligated pig intestines

Citation

Yin, X., Chambers, J.R., Wheatcroft, R., Johnson, R.P., Zhu, J., Liu, B., Gyles, C.L. (2009). Adherence of Escherichia coli O157:H7 mutants in vitro and in ligated pig intestines. Applied and Environmental Microbiology, [online] 75(15), 4975-4983. http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/AEM.00297-09

Abstract

There are contradictory literature reports on the role of verotoxin (VT) in adherence of enterohemorrhagic Escherichia coli O157:H7 (O157 EHEC) to intestinal epithelium. There are reports that putative virulence genes of O island 7 (OI-7), OI-15, and OI-48 of this pathogen may also affect adherence in vitro. Therefore, mutants of vt2 and segments of OI-7 and genes aidA 15 (gene from OI-15) and aidA48 (gene from OI-48) were generated and evaluated for adherence in vitro to cultured human HEp-2 and porcine jejunal epithelial (IPEC-J2) cells and in vivo to enterocytes in pig ileal loops. VT2-negative mutants showed significant decreases in adherence to both HEp-2 and IPEC-J2 cells and to enterocytes in pig ileal loops; complementation only partially restored VT2 production but fully restored the adherence to the wild-type level on cultured cells. Deletion of OI-7 and aidA48 had no effect on adherence, whereas deletion of aidA 15 resulted in a significant decrease in adherence in pig ileal loops but not to the cultured cells. This investigation supports the findings that VT2 plays a role in adherence, shows that results obtained in adherence of E. coli O157:H7 in vivo may differ from those obtained in vitro, and identified AIDA-15 as having a role in adherence of E. coli O157:H7. Copyright © 2009, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.

Publication date

2009-08-01