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Infect. Immun., Jul 1997, 2685-2692, Vol 65, No. 7
GM Pupo, DK Karaolis, R Lan and PR Reeves
Within the species Escherichia coli, there are commensal strains and a
variety of pathogenic strains, including enteropathogenic E. coli (EPEC),
enterohemorrhagic E. coli (EHEC), enterotoxigenic E. coli (ETEC),
enteroinvasive E. coli (EIEC), and urinary tract infection (UTI) strains.
The pathogenic strains are identified by serotype and by possession of
specific virulence determinants (toxins and adhesions, etc.) encoded by
either monocistronic genes, plasmids, or pathogenicity islands. Although
there are studies on the relationships between selected pathogenic strains,
the relatedness among the majority of the pathogenic forms to each other,
to commensal E. coli, and to the genus Shigella (which has often been
suggested to be part of E. coli) has not been determined. We used
multilocus enzyme electrophoresis (MLEE) at 10 enzyme loci and the sequence
of the mdh housekeeping gene to study the genetic relationships of
pathogenic E. coli strains (including Shigella clones), namely, 5 EPEC
strains (serotypes O111 and O55), 3 EHEC strains (serotype O157), 6 ETEC
strains (serotypes O78, O159, and O148), 5 EIEC strains (serotypes O124,
O28, and O112), and 13 Shigella strains representing clones Flexneri,
Dysenteriae, Boydii, and Sonnei, to commensal E. coli strains. Both the
MLEE and mdh sequence trees reveal that EPEC, EHEC, ETEC, EIEC, and UTI
strains are distributed among the ECOR set groups, with no overall
clustering of EPEC, ETEC, EIEC, or UTI strains. The genus Shigella is shown
to comprise a group of closely related pathogenic E. coli strains. Six
pathogenic strains, i.e., M502 (EIEC; O112ac:NM), M503 (EPEC; O111:H12),
M526 (ETEC; O159:H4), M522 (EPEC; O111ac:H12), M524 (ETEC; O78:H11), and
M506 (ETEC; O78:H11), were found to have mdh sequences identical to those
of five ECOR group A strains (ECOR5, ECOR10, ECOR14, ECOR6, and K-12). All
11 strains are closely related by MLEE. The results indicate that
pathogenic strains of E. coli do not have a single evolutionary origin
within E. coli but have arisen many times. The results also suggest the
possibility that any E. coli strain acquiring the appropriate virulence
factors may give rise to a pathogenic form.
Copyright © 1997, American Society for Microbiology
Evolutionary relationships among pathogenic and nonpathogenic Escherichia coli strains inferred from multilocus enzyme electrophoresis and mdh sequence studies
Department of Microbiology, The University of Sydney, New South Wales, Australia.
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