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Escherichia coli ST302: Genomic Analysis of Virulence Potential and Antimicrobial Resistance Mediated by Mobile Genetic Elements.

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TLDR
Light is shed on the virulence and AMR potential of E. coli ST302 strains and informs AMR genomic surveillance.
Abstract
aEPEC are associated with persistent diarrhea, and diarrheal outbreaks in both humans and animals worldwide. They are differentiated from typical EPEC by the lack of bundle-forming pili, and from EHEC by the lack of phage-mediated stx toxins. However, phylogenetic analyses often associate aEPEC with EHEC, promoting the hypothesis that aEPEC are the progenitors of EHEC, which is supported by aEPEC conversion to EHEC by stx-carrying phages. While aEPEC can cause disease outright, the potential to acquire stx, one of the most potent bacterial toxins known, merits close monitoring. Escherichia coli ST302 (O108:H9, O182:H9, O45:H9) are aEPEC that have been isolated from diarrheic human, pig and rabbit hosts, as well as in healthy pigs, however, no study to date has focused on E. coli ST302 strains. Through WGS and hybrid assembly we present the first closed chromosome, and two circularized plasmids of an ST302 strain - F2_18C, isolated from a healthy pig in Australia. A phylogenetic analysis placed E. coli ST302 strains in proximity to EHEC ST32 (O145:H28) strains. Public databases were interrogated for WGSs of E. coli ST302 strains and short-read gene screens were used to compare their virulence-associated gene (VAG) and antimicrobial resistance gene (ARG) cargo. E. coli ST302 strains carry diverse VAGs, including those that typically associated with extraintestinal pathogenic E. coli (ExPEC). Plasmid comparisons showed that pF2_18C_FIB shared homology with EHEC virulence plasmids such as pO103 while pF2_18C_HI2 is a large multidrug resistance IncHI2:ST3 plasmid. A comparison of 33 HI2:ST3 plasmids demonstrated that those of Australian origin have not acquired resistances to extended-spectrum beta-lactams, colistin, fosfomycin or rifampicin, unlike those originating from Asia. F2_18C was shown to carry two additional pathogenicity islands - ETT2, and the STEC-associated PAI CL 3, plasmid-associated heavy metal resistance genes, as well as several unoccupied stx-phage attachment sites. This study sheds light on the virulence and AMR potential of E. coli ST302 strains and informs AMR genomic surveillance.

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Swine Enteric Colibacillosis in Spain: Pathogenic Potential of mcr-1 ST10 and ST131 E. coli Isolates.

TL;DR: This study shows a potential zoonotic swine source of ST131 and high similarities between two pig and two human ST131 isolates of virotype D5 and shows a high prevalence of resistance to colistin related to the presence of the mcr-1 gene.
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Escherichia coli Sequence Type 457 Is an Emerging Extended-Spectrum-β-Lactam-Resistant Lineage with Reservoirs in Wildlife and Food-Producing Animals.

TL;DR: ST457 is a broad host range, geographically diverse E. coli lineage that can cause human extraintestinal disease, including urinary tract infection, and displays a remarkable ability to capture mobile elements that carry and transmit genes encoding resistance to critically important antibiotics.
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Snapshot Study of Whole Genome Sequences of Escherichia coli from Healthy Companion Animals, Livestock, Wildlife, Humans and Food in Italy.

TL;DR: Animals, humans and food are all interconnected sources of antimicrobial resistance (AMR), allowing extensive and rapid exchange of AMR bacteria and genes, and wildlife showed a high average number of virulence-associated genes (VAGs), mostly associated with an ExPEC pathotype.
Journal ArticleDOI

Whole Genome Sequencing Analysis of Porcine Faecal Commensal Escherichia coli Carrying Class 1 Integrons from Sows and Their Offspring

TL;DR: The data shows that healthy Australian pig faeces are an important reservoir of multidrug resistant E. coli that carry genes encoding resistance to multiple first-generation antibiotics and virulence-associated genes.
Journal ArticleDOI

Zoonotic potential of atypical enteropathogenic Escherichia coli (aEPEC) isolated from puppies with diarrhoea in Brazil.

TL;DR: Comparing the virulence and genetic relationship among a set of aEPEC strains previously isolated from diarrheic faeces from companion dogs and humans showed that some canine aEPec strains share virulence genes commonly found in human pathogenic strains.
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