Amézquita-Montes Zorangel, Tamborski Maria, Kopsombut Usa G, Zhang Chengxian, Arzuza Octavio S, Gómez-Duarte Oscar G
1 Division of Pediatric Infectious Diseases, Vanderbilt University School of Medicine , Nashville, Tennessee.
Foodborne Pathog Dis. 2015 May;12(5):454-61. doi: 10.1089/fpd.2014.1881. Epub 2015 Mar 18.
Foodborne pathogens are a leading cause of mild-to-severe gastrointestinal illnesses worldwide. Escherichia coli pathotypes have been known to cause gastrointestinal illnesses in children less than 5 years old in Colombia. However, insufficient information is available on the prevalence of E. coli contamination of food products and the kind of E. coli food product reservoirs. The two objectives of this study were designed to address this issue. The first objective was to ascertain coliform, E. coli, and pathogenic E. coli contamination of food products readily available for human consumption in Cartagena, Colombia. The second objective was to evaluate the relationship between pathogenic E. coli isolated from food products and those isolated from cases of diarrhea in children. Food product samples consisting of pasteurized milk, unpasteurized fruit juice, ground beef, cheese, and vegetables were obtained at four retail stores. The food samples were cultured in liquid media and tested for the presence of coliforms and E. coli. E. coli isolates were tested by polymerase chain reaction for the presence of pathogenic E. coli. Coliforms, E. coli, and E. coli intestinal pathotypes contamination were detected in 88.4%, 53%, and 2.1% of food product samples, respectively. Ground beef and cheese were the only food samples contaminated with E. coli intestinal pathotypes including enteropathogenic (EPEC), Shiga toxin-producing (STEC), and enterotoxigenic E. coli (ETEC). Closed multilocus sequencing typing relationships between diarrheagenic E. coli isolates from food products and from individuals with diarrhea suggest that food products readily available at public markets in Cartagena can transmit ETEC and possibly EPEC and STEC. We demonstrated that a high proportion of food products for human consumption available at public markets in Cartagena are contaminated with coliforms, E. coli, and E. coli intestinal pathogens. Furthermore, food products containing E. coli intestinal pathogens may be involved in the transmission of foodborne illnesses among children in Cartagena, Colombia.
食源性病原体是全球范围内导致轻度至重度胃肠道疾病的主要原因。已知大肠埃希菌致病型会在哥伦比亚导致5岁以下儿童患胃肠道疾病。然而,关于食品中大肠埃希菌污染的流行情况以及大肠埃希菌食品储存库的种类,现有信息不足。本研究的两个目标旨在解决这一问题。第一个目标是确定哥伦比亚卡塔赫纳市可供人类食用的食品中大肠菌群、大肠埃希菌和致病性大肠埃希菌的污染情况。第二个目标是评估从食品中分离出的致病性大肠埃希菌与从儿童腹泻病例中分离出的致病性大肠埃希菌之间的关系。在四家零售店采集了由巴氏杀菌牛奶、未巴氏杀菌果汁、碎牛肉、奶酪和蔬菜组成的食品样本。将食品样本在液体培养基中培养,并检测大肠菌群和大肠埃希菌的存在情况。通过聚合酶链反应检测大肠埃希菌分离株中致病性大肠埃希菌的存在情况。分别在88.4%、53%和2.1%的食品样本中检测到大肠菌群、大肠埃希菌和大肠埃希菌肠道致病型污染。碎牛肉和奶酪是仅被包括肠致病性(EPEC)、产志贺毒素(STEC)和肠产毒性大肠埃希菌(ETEC)在内的大肠埃希菌肠道致病型污染的食品样本。食品中腹泻性大肠埃希菌分离株与腹泻个体中分离株之间的封闭多位点测序分型关系表明,卡塔赫纳市公共市场上容易获得的食品可能传播ETEC,也可能传播EPEC和STEC。我们证明,卡塔赫纳市公共市场上可供人类食用的食品中有很大比例被大肠菌群、大肠埃希菌和大肠埃希菌肠道病原体污染。此外,含有大肠埃希菌肠道病原体的食品可能参与了哥伦比亚卡塔赫纳市儿童食源性疾病的传播。