Department of Microbiology, University of Minnesota, MMC 196, 420 Delaware Street, S.E., Minneapolis, MN 55455, USA.
Water Res. 2010 Oct;44(18):5463-73. doi: 10.1016/j.watres.2010.06.058. Epub 2010 Jun 30.
Contamination of recreational waters with Escherichia coli and Enterococcus sp. is a widespread problem resulting in beach closures and loss of recreational activity. While E. coli is frequently used as an indicator of fecal contamination, and has been extensively measured in waterways, few studies have examined the presence of potentially pathogenic E. coli strains in beach waters. In this study, a combination of high-throughput, robot-assisted colony hybridization and PCR-based analyses were used to determine the genomic composition and frequency of virulence genes present in E. coli isolated from beach water in Avalon Bay, Santa Catalina Island, CA. A total of 24,493 E. coli isolates were collected from two sites at a popular swimming beach between August through September 2007 and from July through August 2008. All isolates were examined for the presence of shiga-like toxins (stx1/stx2), intimin (eaeA), and enterotoxins (ST/LT). Of the 24,493 isolates examined, 3.6% contained the eaeA gene, indicating that these isolates were potential EPEC strains. On five dates, however, greater than 10% of the strains were potential EPEC, suggesting that incidence of virulence genes at this beach has a strong temporal component. No STEC or ETEC isolates were detected, and only eight (<1.0%) of the potential EPEC isolates were found to carry the EAF plasmid. The potential EPEC isolates mainly belonged to E. coli phylogenetic groups B1 or B2, and carried the β intimin subtype. DNA fingerprint analyses of the potential EPEC strains indicated that the isolates belonged to several genetically diverse groups, although clonal isolates were frequently detected. While the presence of virulence genes alone cannot be used to determine the pathogenicity of strains, results from this study show that potential EPEC strains can be found in marine beach water and their presence needs to be considered as one of the factors used in decisions concerning beach closures.
海水浴场中大肠杆菌和肠球菌的污染是一个普遍存在的问题,会导致海滩关闭和娱乐活动的减少。尽管大肠杆菌常被用作粪便污染的指示物,并在水道中得到了广泛的测量,但很少有研究检测到海滩水中可能存在的致病性大肠杆菌菌株。在这项研究中,我们结合高通量、机器人辅助的集落杂交和基于 PCR 的分析方法,确定了从加利福尼亚州圣卡塔利娜岛阿瓦隆湾海滩水中分离出的大肠杆菌的基因组组成和毒力基因的频率。2007 年 8 月至 9 月和 2008 年 7 月至 8 月期间,从一个受欢迎的游泳海滩的两个地点共采集了 24493 株大肠杆菌。所有分离株均检测到志贺样毒素(stx1/stx2)、肠细胞黏附素(eaeA)和肠毒素(ST/LT)的存在。在检查的 24493 株分离物中,有 3.6%含有 eaeA 基因,表明这些分离物可能是 EPEC 菌株。然而,在五个日期中,超过 10%的菌株可能是 EPEC,表明该海滩的毒力基因的发生率具有很强的时间成分。未检测到 STEC 或 ETEC 分离物,只有 8 株(<1.0%)潜在的 EPEC 分离物携带 EAF 质粒。潜在的 EPEC 分离物主要属于大肠杆菌的 B1 或 B2 进化群,携带β肠细胞黏附素亚型。对潜在的 EPEC 菌株的 DNA 指纹分析表明,这些分离株属于几个遗传上不同的群体,尽管经常检测到克隆分离株。虽然仅存在毒力基因不能用来确定菌株的致病性,但本研究结果表明,潜在的 EPEC 菌株可在海洋海滩水中发现,其存在需要作为决定海滩关闭的因素之一加以考虑。