A Mosaic Pathogenicity Island Made Up of the Locus of Enterocyte Effacement and a Pathogenicity Island of Escherichia coli O157:H7 Is Frequently Present in Attaching and Effacing E. coli

AUTOR(ES)
FONTE

American Society for Microbiology

RESUMO

Enteropathogenic Escherichia coli (EPEC) and enterohemorragic E. coli (EHEC) possess a pathogenicity island (PAI), termed the locus of enterocyte effacement (LEE), which confers the capability to cause the characteristic attaching and effacing lesions of the brush border. Due to this common property, these organisms are also termed attaching and effacing E. coli (AEEC). Sequencing of the EHEC O157 genome recently revealed the presence of other putative PAIs in the chromosome of this organism. In this article, we report on the presence of four of those PAIs in a panel of 133 E. coli strains belonging to different pathogroups and serotypes. One of these PAIs, termed O122 in strain EDL 933 and SpLE3 in strain Sakai, was observed in most of the AEEC strains examined but not in the other groups of E. coli. It was also found to contain the virulence-associated gene efa1/lifA. In EHEC O157, PAI O122 is located 0.7 Mb away from the LEE. Conversely, we demonstrated that in many EHEC non-O157 strains and EPEC strains belonging to eight serogroups, PAI O122 and the LEE are physically linked to form a cointegrated structure. This structure can be considered a mosaic PAI that could have been acquired originally by AEEC. In some clones, such as EHEC O157, the LEE-O122 mosaic PAI might have undergone recombinational events, resulting in the insertion of the portion referred to as PAI O122 in a different location.

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