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Infection and Immunity, October 1999, p. 5048-5059, Vol. 67, No. 10
Unité de Pathogénie
Bactérienne des Muqueuses1 and
Station Centrale de Microscopie
Electronique,2 Institut Pasteur, 75724 Paris
Cedex 15, France
Received 27 April 1999/Returned for modification 9 June
1999/Accepted 27 July 1999
The afa gene clusters, which encode proteins involved
in adhesion to epithelial cells, from Escherichia coli
strains associated with urinary and intestinal infections in humans
have been characterized. Pathogenic isolates of bovine and porcine
origin that possess afa-related sequences have recently
been described. We report in this work the cloning and characterization
of the afa-7 and afa-8 gene clusters from
bovine isolates. Hybridization and sequencing experiments revealed that
despite similarity in genetic organization, the afa-7 and
afa-8 genes, and the well-characterized afa-3
operon expressed by human-pathogenic isolates, correspond to three
different members of the afa family of gene clusters.
However, like the afa-3 gene cluster, both the
afa-7 and afa-8 gene clusters were found to
encode an afimbrial adhesin (AfaE) and an invasin (AfaD). The AfaD
peptides encoded by the three gene clusters were only 45% identical,
but functional complementation experiments indicated that they belong
to the same family of invasins. Hemagglutination and adhesion assays
demonstrated that the AfaE-VII and AfaE-VIII adhesins bind to different
receptors and that these receptors are not the human decay-accelerating
factor recognized to be the receptor of all previously described AfaE
adhesins. The AfaE-VIII adhesin is very similar to the M agglutinin of
human-uropathogenic strains. We used PCR assays to screen 25 bovine
strains for afaD and afaE genes of either the
afa-7 or afa-8 gene cluster. The afa-8 gene cluster was highly prevalent in bovine isolates
previously reported to carry afa-related sequences (23 of
24 strains), particularly in strains producing cytotoxic necrotizing
factors (16 of 16 strains). The location of the afa-8 gene
cluster on the plasmids or chromosome of these isolates suggests that
it could be carried by a mobile element, facilitating its dissemination
among bovine-pathogenic E. coli strains.
0019-9567/99/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1999, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Molecular Cloning and Characterization of the afa-7
and afa-8 Gene Clusters Encoding Afimbrial Adhesins in
Escherichia coli Strains Associated with Diarrhea or
Septicemia in Calves
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Pathogénie
Bactérienne des Muqueuses, Institut Pasteur, 28 rue du Dr Roux,
75724 Paris Cedex 15, France. Phone: 33 1 40613280. Fax: 33 1 40613640. E-mail: clb{at}pasteur.fr.
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