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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Hemagglutination patterns of enterotoxigenic and enteropathogenic Escherichia coli determined with human, bovine, chicken, and guinea pig erythrocytes in the presence and absence of mannose

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TLDR
The data reported herein suggest a relationship between the HA type III phenotype and virulence (enteropathogenicity) in both the EPEC and FEEC serogroups.
Abstract
A hemagglutination (HA)-typing system has been developed for the presumptive identification of enterotoxigenic Escherichia coli (ETEC) possessing the colonization factor antigens (CFA) CFA/I or CFA/II. E. coli isolates are grown on CFA agar and tested for mannose-sensitive (MS) or mannose-resistant (MR) HA of human, bovine, chicken, and guinea pig erythrocytes. CFA/I-positive ETEC exhibit MRHA with human, bovine, and chicken erythrocytes, but no HA with guinea pig erythrocytes. CFA/II-positive ETEC produce HA (MRHA) only with bovine and chicken erythrocytes. Common pili appear to be the primary MS-hemagglutinin of E. coli because the prototype strain K-12 exhibits HA (MSHA) with all but bovine erythrocytes. However, only 6.6% (23 of 351) of E. coli belonging to the classical enteropathogenic E. coli serogroups (EPEC) possessed the same HA pattern as strain K-12; 42% of the EPEC cultures (146 of 351) were similar to K-12 in producing MSHA with chicken and guinea pig erythrocytes and no HA with bovine erythrocytes, but different in that these produced either no HA or MRHA with human erythrocytes. These EPEC-associated HA patterns were assigned to a separate category, termed HA type III. Non-EPEC serogroups associated with sporadic diarrhea (i.e., the facultatively enteropathogenic E. coli, or FEEC) and 41% (19 of 46) of available Salmonella isolates also produced HA type III patterns. This observation is of considerable interest because many FEEC possess somatic antigens cross-reactive with Salmonella. Although the biochemical basis for this result has not been established, the data reported herein suggest a relationship between the HA type III phenotype and virulence (enteropathogenicity) in both the EPEC and FEEC serogroups. We propose that HA typing be used in conjunction with serotyping of E. coli to determine the degree of association of HA type III E. coli with sporadic diarrhea in infants and young children.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

An inducible bundle-forming pilus of enteropathogenic Escherichia coli.

TL;DR: Enteropathogenic Escherichia coli (EPEC), a cause of childhood diarrhea, grow on the surface of the small intestine and on cultured epithelial cells as colonies of adherent bacteria.
Book ChapterDOI

2 Serotyping of Escherichia coli

F. Ørskov, +1 more
TL;DR: This chapter discusses the principles and procedures for serotyping of Escherichia coli (E. coli) and discusses the morphology and immunochemistry of the surface structures that are important in serotypesing.
Journal ArticleDOI

Host-specific fimbrial adhesins of noninvasive enterotoxigenic Escherichia coli strains.

TL;DR: Adhesins of Human Enterotoxigenic E. coli Strains are characterized by high adhesion to Intesinal Epithelial Cells, and the nature of the Receptor Sites for Adhesins is explained.
Journal ArticleDOI

Adhesion, hemagglutination, and virulence of Escherichia coli causing urinary tract infections.

TL;DR: The bacterial surface antigen(s) mediating mannose-resistant hemagglutination of human erythrocytes and attachment to human urinary tract epithelial cells may be one factor selecting for E. coli from among the fecal flora which infect the urinary tract.
Journal ArticleDOI

Characterization of enteroadherent-aggregative Escherichia coli, a putative agent of diarrheal disease.

TL;DR: The contention that EA-AggEC may represent a distinct category of diarrheagenic E. coli is supported, as the intestinal lesions and (Shiga-like) limb paralysis and death in rabbits inoculated with live organisms suggest toxin involvement.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Test for Escherichia coli Enterotoxin Using Infant Mice: Application in a Study of Diarrhea in Children in Honolulu

TL;DR: Use of the infant-mouse test in a study of 37 children with diarrhea in Honolulu revealed no enterotoxin-producing coliform bacteria in the stools, in contrast to studies reported from India, where such strains were found in a large proportion of undifferentiated cases of acute diarrhea in adults.
Journal ArticleDOI

Plasmid-controlled colonization factor associated with virulence in Esherichia coli enterotoxigenic for humans.

TL;DR: It was demonstrated that E. coli H-10407, but not H10407-, possessed pilus-like surface structures which agglutinated with the specific adsorbed (anti-colonization factor) antiserum, which may play an important and possibly essential role in naturally occurring E coli enterotoxic diarrhea in man.
Journal ArticleDOI

Pathogenesis of Escherichia coli diarrhea.

TL;DR: Two Escherichia coli strains isolated in Vietnam from American soldiers with diarrhea and acute "colitis" were examined for virulence in both in vitro and in vivo experimental models.
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