Tropical Medicine and Infectious Disease (May 2024)

Molecular Markers and Antimicrobial Resistance Patterns of Extraintestinal Pathogenic <i>Escherichia coli</i> from Camel Calves Including Colistin-Resistant and Hypermucoviscuous Strains

  • Domonkos Sváb,
  • Zoltán Somogyi,
  • István Tóth,
  • Joseph Marina,
  • Shantymol V. Jose,
  • John Jeeba,
  • Anas Safna,
  • Judit Juhász,
  • Péter Nagy,
  • Ahmed Mohamed Taha Abdelnassir,
  • Ahmed Abdelrhman Ismail,
  • László Makrai

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/tropicalmed9060123
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 6
p. 123

Abstract

Read online

Extraintestinal pathogenic Escherichia coli (ExPEC) strains are capable of causing various systemic infections in both humans and animals. In this study, we isolated and characterized 30 E. coli strains from the parenchymatic organs and brains of young (E. coli: three strains carried cnf1, encoding cytotoxic necrotizing factor type 1, the key virulence gene of necrotoxigenic E. coli (NTEC), and one carried eae encoding intimin, the key virulence gene of enteropathogenic E. coli (EPEC). An investigation of the integration sites of pathogenicity islands (PAIs) and the presence of prophage-related sequences showed that the strains carry diverse arrays of mobile genetic elements, which may contribute to their antimicrobial resistance and virulence patterns. Our work is the first to describe ExPEC strains from camels, and points to their veterinary pathogenic as well as zoonotic potential in this important domestic animal.

Keywords