Johnson James R, Johnston Brian D, Delavari Parissa, Thuras Paul, Clabots Connie, Sadowsky Michael J
Minneapolis VA Medical Center, Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA
Department of Medicine, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA.
Appl Environ Microbiol. 2017 Dec 1;83(24). doi: 10.1128/AEM.01329-17. Print 2017 Dec 15.
Possible external reservoirs for extraintestinal pathogenic (ExPEC) strains that cause infections in humans are poorly defined. Because of the tremendous human health importance of ExPEC infections, we assessed surface waters and domesticated and wild animals in Minnesota and Wisconsin as potential reservoirs of ExPEC of human health relevance. We characterized 595 isolates (obtained from 1999 to 2002; 280 from seven surface water sites, 315 from feces of 13 wild and domesticated animal species) for phylogroup and virulence genotype, including inferred ExPEC status, by using multiplex PCR-based methods. We also compared the pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE) profiles of the isolates with a large private PFGE profile library. We found a predominance of non-ExPEC strains (95% and 93% among water and animal isolates, respectively), which were mainly from phylogroups A and B1, plus a minority of ExPEC strains (5% and 7% among water isolates and animal isolates, respectively), predominantly from phylogroup B2. The ExPEC strains, although significantly associated with cats, dogs, and turkeys, occurred in several additional animal species (goat, horse, chicken, pig) and were distributed broadly across all surface water sites. Virulence gene content among the animal source ExPEC isolates segregated significantly in relation to host species, following established patterns. PFGE analysis indicated that 11 study isolates closely matched (94% to 100% profile similarity) reference human clinical and fecal isolates. These findings imply what probably is a low but non-zero risk to humans from environmental and animal source isolates, especially those from specific human-associated animal species. Our detection of potentially pathogenic strains that may pose a health threat to humans among isolates from surface waters and wild and domesticated animals suggests a need for heightened attention to these reservoirs as possible sources for human acquisition of disease-causing Although cats, dogs, and turkeys were especially high-prevalence sources, the presence of such strains in other animal species and at all sampled water sites suggests that this potential risk may be widespread.
导致人类感染的肠外致病性(ExPEC)菌株的可能外部储存宿主尚不清楚。鉴于ExPEC感染对人类健康具有重大影响,我们评估了明尼苏达州和威斯康星州的地表水以及家养和野生动物,将其作为与人类健康相关的ExPEC潜在储存宿主。我们使用基于多重PCR的方法,对595株分离株(于1999年至2002年获得;280株来自7个地表水采样点,315株来自13种野生和家养动物的粪便)进行了系统发育群和毒力基因型特征分析,包括推断的ExPEC状态。我们还将这些分离株的脉冲场凝胶电泳(PFGE)图谱与一个大型的私人PFGE图谱库进行了比较。我们发现非ExPEC菌株占主导地位(在水分离株和动物分离株中分别占95%和93%),主要来自A群和B1群,还有少数ExPEC菌株(在水分离株和动物分离株中分别占5%和7%),主要来自B2群。ExPEC菌株虽然与猫、狗和火鸡有显著关联,但也存在于其他几种动物物种(山羊、马、鸡、猪)中,并且广泛分布于所有地表水采样点。动物源ExPEC分离株中的毒力基因含量根据既定模式与宿主物种显著相关。PFGE分析表明,11株研究分离株与参考人类临床和粪便分离株密切匹配(图谱相似度为94%至100%)。这些发现表明,环境和动物源分离株对人类的风险可能较低但不为零,尤其是来自特定人类相关动物物种的分离株。我们在地表水以及野生和家养动物的分离株中检测到可能对人类健康构成威胁的潜在致病菌株,这表明需要更加关注这些储存宿主,将其作为人类获得致病病原体的可能来源。虽然猫、狗和火鸡是特别高流行率的来源,但这些菌株在其他动物物种和所有采样水点的存在表明这种潜在风险可能很普遍。