Emerging Infectious Diseases (Jun 2018)

Frequent Implication of Multistress-Tolerant Campylobacter jejuni in Human Infections

  • Euna Oh,
  • Linda Chui,
  • Junghee Bae,
  • Vincent Li,
  • Angela Ma,
  • Steven K. Mutschall,
  • Eduardo N. Taboada,
  • Lynn M. McMullen,
  • Byeonghwa Jeon

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3201/eid2406.171587
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 24, no. 6
pp. 1037 – 1044

Abstract

Read online

Campylobacter jejuni, a major cause of bacterial foodborne illnesses, is considered highly susceptible to environmental stresses. In this study, we extensively investigated the stress tolerance of 121 clinical strains of C. jejuni against 5 stress conditions (aerobic stress, disinfectant exposure, freeze-thaw, heat treatment, and osmotic stress) that this pathogenic bacterium might encounter during foodborne transmission to humans. In contrast to our current perception about high stress sensitivity of C. jejuni, a number of clinical strains of C. jejuni were highly tolerant to multiple stresses. We performed population genetics analysis by using comparative genomic fingerprinting and showed that multistress-tolerant strains of C. jejuni constituted distinct clades. The comparative genomic fingerprinting subtypes belonging to multistress-tolerant clades were more frequently implicated in human infections than those in stress-sensitive clades. We identified unique stress-tolerant C. jejuni clones and showed the role of stress tolerance in human campylobacteriosis.

Keywords