Ron Eliora Z
Department of Molecular Microbiology and Biotechnology, The George S Wise Faculty of Life Sciences, Tel-Aviv University, Tel-Aviv 69978, Israel.
Curr Opin Microbiol. 2006 Feb;9(1):28-32. doi: 10.1016/j.mib.2005.12.001. Epub 2005 Dec 27.
Extraintestinal pathogenic Escherichia coli (ExPEC) strains are the cause of a diverse spectrum of invasive human and animal infections, often leading to septicemia. ExPEC strains contain virulence factors that enable them to survive in the host blood and tissues. Most of these virulence factors are distributed in ExPEC strains in a host-independent fashion. Genomic analyses of these strains provide evidence for numerous recombinational events and horizontal gene transfer, as well as for a high diversity of virulence factors. In studies of human and avian septicemic strains of serotypes O2 and O78 it appears that there is a positive correlation between virulence, invasiveness and clonal origin. Yet, it is clear that clonal division in these strains, as well as distribution of virulence factors, is independent of the host and closely related clones reside in different hosts. Although the possibility exists that ExPEC strains do have a certain degree of host specificity, which is not obvious from genomic studies, it is clear that the similarity of virulence factors presents a significant zoonotic risk.
肠外致病性大肠杆菌(ExPEC)菌株是多种侵袭性人类和动物感染的病因,常导致败血症。ExPEC菌株含有使其能够在宿主血液和组织中存活的毒力因子。这些毒力因子大多以不依赖宿主的方式分布在ExPEC菌株中。对这些菌株的基因组分析为大量重组事件和水平基因转移以及毒力因子的高度多样性提供了证据。在对血清型O2和O78的人类和禽类败血症菌株的研究中,似乎毒力、侵袭性与克隆起源之间存在正相关。然而,很明显这些菌株中的克隆分化以及毒力因子的分布与宿主无关,密切相关的克隆存在于不同宿主中。虽然存在ExPEC菌株确实具有一定程度宿主特异性的可能性,这从基因组研究中并不明显,但很明显毒力因子的相似性带来了重大的人畜共患病风险。