Gordon David M, Stern Steven E, Collignon Peter J
School of Botany and Zoology, Australian National University, Canberra ACT 0200, Australia.
School of Finance and Applied Statistics, Australian National University, Canberra ACT 0200, Australia.
Microbiology (Reading). 2005 Jan;151(Pt 1):15-23. doi: 10.1099/mic.0.27425-0.
Escherichia coli were isolated from the faeces of 266 individuals living in the Canberra region of Australia. The isolates were characterized for their ECOR group membership (A, B1, B2 or D) and for the presence of 29 virulence-associated traits. Overall, 19.5 % of the strains were members of group A, 12.4 % B1, 45.1 % B2 and 22.9 % D. The frequency with which strains belonging to the four ECOR groups were observed varied with the age and sex of the hosts from which they were isolated. In males, the probability of isolating A or D strains increased with host age, whilst the probability of detecting a group B2 strain declined. In females, the probability of recovering A or B2 strains increased with increasing host age and there was a concomitant decline in the likelihood of isolating B1 or D strains. Of the 29 virulence-associated traits examined, 24 were detected in more than one strain. The likelihood of detecting most traits varied with a strain's ECOR membership, with the exception of afa/draBC, astA, cvaC, eaeA, iss and iutA, for which there was no statistically significant evidence of an association with ECOR group. The frequency with which fimH, iha, eaeA, iroN, hlyD, iss, ompT and K1 were detected in a strain depended on the age or sex of the host from which the strain was isolated. In group B2 strains many of the virulence traits were non-randomly associated, with some co-occurring in a strain less often than expected by chance, whilst others were co-associated. In 17 cases, the extent to which two virulence traits were co-associated was found to depend on host sex and age. The results of this study suggest that the morphological, physiological and dietary differences that occur among human individuals of different sex or age may influence the distribution of E. coli genotypes.
从生活在澳大利亚堪培拉地区的266个人的粪便中分离出了大肠杆菌。对分离出的菌株进行了ECOR菌群归属(A、B1、B2或D)以及29种毒力相关特征的鉴定。总体而言,19.5%的菌株属于A群,12.4%属于B1群,45.1%属于B2群,22.9%属于D群。观察到的属于四个ECOR菌群的菌株频率因分离它们的宿主的年龄和性别而异。在男性中,分离出A群或D群菌株的概率随宿主年龄增加而增加,而检测到B2群菌株的概率下降。在女性中,分离出A群或B2群菌株的概率随宿主年龄增加而增加,同时分离出B1群或D群菌株的可能性随之下降。在所检测的29种毒力相关特征中,有24种在不止一个菌株中被检测到。检测到大多数特征的可能性因菌株的ECOR归属而异,但afa/draBC、astA、cvaC、eaeA、iss和iutA除外,没有统计学上显著的证据表明它们与ECOR菌群有关联。菌株中fimH、iha、eaeA、iroN、hlyD、iss、ompT和K1的检测频率取决于分离该菌株的宿主的年龄或性别。在B2群菌株中,许多毒力特征是非随机关联的,有些在菌株中同时出现的频率低于偶然预期,而其他一些则是共同关联的。在17个案例中,发现两种毒力特征的共同关联程度取决于宿主的性别和年龄。这项研究的结果表明,不同性别或年龄的人类个体之间存在的形态、生理和饮食差异可能会影响大肠杆菌基因型的分布。