Mellata M, Johnson J R, Curtiss R
The Biodesign Institute, Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ, USA.
Veterans Affairs Medical Center, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN, USA.
Zoonoses Public Health. 2018 Feb;65(1):103-113. doi: 10.1111/zph.12376. Epub 2017 Jul 13.
The zoonotic potential of Escherichia coli from chicken-source food products is important to define for public health purposes. Previously, genotypic and phenotypic screening of E. coli isolates from commercial chicken meat and shell eggs identified some E. coli strains that by molecular criteria resembled human-source extraintestinal pathogenic E. coli (ExPEC). Here, to clarify the zoonotic risk of such chicken-source E. coli, we compared selected E. coli isolates from chicken meat and eggs, stratified by molecularly defined ExPEC status, to human-source ExPEC and to laboratory E. coli for virulence in rodent models of sepsis, meningitis and UTI, and evaluated whether specific bacterial characteristics predict experimental virulence. Multiple chicken-source E. coli resembled human-source ExPEC in their ability to cause one or multiple different ExPEC-associated infections. Swimming ability corresponded with urovirulence, K1 capsule corresponded with ability to cause neonatal meningitis, and biofilm formation in urine corresponded with ability to cause sepsis. In contrast, molecularly defined ExPEC status and individual genotypic traits were uncorrelated with ability to cause sepsis, and neither complement sensitivity nor growth in human urine corresponded with virulence in any infection model. These findings establish that chicken-derived food products contain E. coli strains that, in rodent models of multiple human-associated ExPEC infections, are able to cause disease comparably to human-source E. coli clinical isolates, which suggests that they may pose a significant food safety threat. Further study is needed to define the level of risk they pose to human health, which if appreciable would justify efforts to monitor for and reduce or eliminate them.
为了公共卫生目的,明确鸡肉源食品中大肠杆菌的人畜共患病潜力很重要。此前,对来自商业鸡肉和带壳鸡蛋的大肠杆菌分离株进行的基因型和表型筛选,鉴定出一些根据分子标准类似于人源肠外致病性大肠杆菌(ExPEC)的大肠杆菌菌株。在此,为了阐明此类鸡肉源大肠杆菌的人畜共患病风险,我们将从鸡肉和鸡蛋中选择的、根据分子定义的ExPEC状态分层的大肠杆菌分离株,与人源ExPEC以及实验室大肠杆菌在败血症、脑膜炎和尿路感染的啮齿动物模型中的毒力进行了比较,并评估了特定细菌特征是否能预测实验性毒力。多种鸡肉源大肠杆菌在引起一种或多种不同的ExPEC相关感染的能力上类似于人源ExPEC。游动能力与尿路毒力相关,K1荚膜与引起新生儿脑膜炎的能力相关,尿液中生物膜形成与引起败血症的能力相关。相比之下,分子定义的ExPEC状态和个体基因型特征与引起败血症的能力无关,补体敏感性和在人尿中的生长在任何感染模型中均与毒力无关。这些发现表明,鸡肉衍生食品中含有的大肠杆菌菌株,在多种人类相关ExPEC感染的啮齿动物模型中,能够引起与人类源大肠杆菌临床分离株相当的疾病,这表明它们可能构成重大食品安全威胁。需要进一步研究来确定它们对人类健康构成的风险水平,如果风险可观,将证明有必要努力监测并减少或消除它们。