SELF-TRANSMISSIBLE R-PLASMIDS ENCODING CS31A AMONG HUMAN ESCHERICHIA-COLI STRAINS ISOLATED FROM DIARRHEAL STOOLS

Citation
C. Jallat et al., SELF-TRANSMISSIBLE R-PLASMIDS ENCODING CS31A AMONG HUMAN ESCHERICHIA-COLI STRAINS ISOLATED FROM DIARRHEAL STOOLS, Infection and immunity, 62(7), 1994, pp. 2865-2873
Citations number
36
Categorie Soggetti
Immunology,"Infectious Diseases
Journal title
ISSN journal
00199567
Volume
62
Issue
7
Year of publication
1994
Pages
2865 - 2873
Database
ISI
SICI code
0019-9567(1994)62:7<2865:SRECAH>2.0.ZU;2-0
Abstract
The CS31A antigen was first described for septicemic and enterotoxigen ic bovine E. coli strains. In our study, of 597 human Escherichia coli strains isolated from diarrheagenic stools of hospitalized patients, 30 (5%) hybridized dth the CS31A DNA probe. These CS31A-positive E. co li strains diffusely adhered to Caco-2 and/or HEp-2 cells and produced a major surface protein of either 30 or 30.5 kDa according to the str ain. These proteins were antigenically related to the two forms of the CS31A antigen, namely, CS31A-L and CS31A-H. Genes encoding CSS1A were located on 140-kb conjugative R plasmids. E. coli transconjugants exp ressed major surface proteins similar to those of the wild-type strain s and adhered to Caco-2 and/or HEp-2 cells. An association of CS31A an d another adhesive factor of the Dr family was found in 70% of wild-ty pe strains, since 21 strains hybridized with the diffuse adhesion DNA probe corresponding to the accessory gene (daaC) of the F1845 adhesin. Comparison of the restriction patterns of the 140-kb R plasmids of th e CS31A-positive E. coli strains showed these plasmids to be similar. Hybridization experiments indicated that the genes encoding CS31A and resistance to penicillin were located together on either of two 20- or 27-kb EcoRI restriction fragments in four E. coli strains. We reporte d a similar linkage between these genes in Klebsiella pneumoniae strai ns which produced CF29K, a CSS1A-like antigen. These results suggest a horizontal transfer between E. coli and K. pneumoniae strains.