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ORIGINAL RESEARCH article

Front. Microbiol., 02 May 2016
Sec. Infectious Agents and Disease
This article is part of the Research Topic Applications of STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics) tools in microbiology of infectious diseases View all 23 articles

Prevalence of Escherichia coli Virulence Genes in Patients with Diarrhea and a Subpopulation of Healthy Volunteers in Madrid, Spain

\r\nAdriana Cabal,Adriana Cabal1,2María García-Castillo,María García-Castillo3,4Rafael Cantn,Rafael Cantón3,4Christian GortzarChristian Gortázar2Lucas DomínguezLucas Domínguez1Julio lvarez*Julio Álvarez5*
  • 1VISAVET Health Surveillance Centre, Universidad Complutense, Madrid, Spain
  • 2SaBio-IREC (CSIC-UCLM-JCCM), Ciudad Real, Spain
  • 3Servicio de Microbiología, Hospital Universitario Ramón y Cajal, Madrid, Spain
  • 4Servicio de Microbiología, Instituto Ramón y Cajal de Investigación Sanitaria, Madrid, Spain
  • 5Department of Veterinary Population Medicine, College of Veterinary Medicine, University of Minnesota, St. Paul, MN, USA

Etiological diagnosis of diarrheal diseases may be complicated by their multi-factorial nature. In addition, Escherichia coli strains present in the gut can occasionally harbor virulence genes (VGs) without causing disease, which complicates the assessment of their clinical significance in particular. The aim of this study was to detect and quantify nine VGs (stx1, stx2, eae, aggR, ehxA, invA, est, elt and bfpA) typically present in five E. coli enteric pathotypes [enterohaemorrhagic E. coli (EHEC), enterotoxigenic E. coli (ETEC), enteropathogenic E. coli (EPEC), enteroaggregative E. coli (EAEC), and enteroinvasive E. coli (EIEC)] in fecal samples collected from 49 patients with acute diarrhea and 32 healthy controls from Madrid, Spain. In addition, the presence of four serotype-related genes (wzxO104 and fliCH4, rfbO157, and fliCH7) was also determined. Presence of target genes was assessed using a quantitative real-time PCR assay previously developed, and the association of presence and burden of VGs with clinical disease and/or other risk factors was explored. Prevalence of ehxA [typically associated with Shigatoxin producing E. coli (STEC) and (EPEC), invA (EIEC), and the rfbO157+fliCH7 (STEC)] combination were significantly (p < 0.02) higher in the diarrheic group, while the wzxO104+fliCH4 combination was significantly (p = 0.014) more prevalent in the control group. On the other hand, eae was detected in more than 90% of the individuals in both patient and control populations, and it was not associated with bfpA, suggesting the absence of typical EPEC. No significant differences in the quantitative values were detected for any VG among study groups, but the difference in the load of aggR (EAEC) and invA in the patients with respect to the controls was close to the significance, suggesting a potential role of these VGs in the clinical signs observed when they are present at high levels.

Introduction

Escherichia coli are commensal bacteria living in the intestinal tract of animals and humans. Some innocuous strains can incorporate virulence genes (VGs) by lateral gene transfer that may allow them to cause intestinal and extraintestinal disease (Ochman et al., 2000). There are six pathotypes than can produce intestinal disease in humans: STEC (Shigatoxin-producing E. coli, including EHEC – enterohaemorrhagic E. coli), EPEC (Enteropathogenic E. coli), ETEC (Enterotoxigenic E. coli), EIEC (Enteroinvasive E. coli), EAEC (Enteroaggregative E. coli), and DAEC (Diffusely adherent E. coli; Kaper, 2005). E. coli strains are classified into these pathotypes depending on the presence/absence of several combinations of VGs. In EPEC, the virulence machinery is based on the carriage of eae, tir, and other proteins required for causing attachment and effacement (A/E) lesions and they are encoded on a chromosomal pathogenicity island known as the locus for enterocyte effacement (LEE; Kaper et al., 2004). Typical EPEC (tEPEC) strains also possess the EAF plasmid, which encodes for the bundle-forming pili (bfpA gene) and the perABC genes that regulate eae expression. Atypical EPEC (aEPEC) strains lack the EAF plasmid (Johnson and Nolan, 2009), and can affect children in both developed and developing countries, and together with EHEC and EAEC strains, are considered an emerging pathogen (Trabulsi et al., 2002; Huang et al., 2004). EAEC strains possess a pAA plasmid for fimbriae production, which contains the aggR transcriptional activator and its regulated genes (Kaper et al., 2004; Johnson and Nolan, 2009). In addition, there is a cluster of atypical EAEC strains that lacks aggR and may not produce diarrhea in humans. EHEC infection can lead to hemorrhagic colitis (HC) and in the most severe cases hemolytic-uremic syndrome (HUS; Paton and Paton, 1998), which is often associated with serotypes O157:H7 and, recently, O104:H4. Their virulence is mainly due to two types of Shiga-like toxins, Stx1 and Stx2, but also to eae (intimin) and ehxA (enterohaemolysin). EIEC carries an invasion plasmid (pInv) which encodes the vir regulon, which is key for intestinal dysentery. ETEC has been reported as well as the causative agent of the traveler’s diarrhea in patients who traveled to developing countries (Gascon et al., 1998). ETEC pathogenicity is mainly determined by the production of heat-stable (ST) and labile-stable (LT) enterotoxins. In patients with an EIEC or ETEC infection, symptoms usually can be resolved without any complication while in severe cases of EHEC, 10% of the patients can develop HUS (Nataro and Kaper, 1998). New pathotypes may also emerge due to the genetic recombination of some of these VGs, as demonstrated in the 2011 outbreak in Germany caused by a new O104:H4 EAEC/EHEC strain that affected 3,816 people and caused 54 deaths (Frank et al., 2011). In Spain, only one HUS STEC case and one non-HUS case due to the infection with the EAEC/EHEC strain were reported (Mora et al., 2011).

In both developing and developed countries, the causative agents of diarrhea may vary. In developed countries, diarrhea caused by E. coli (attributed to EPEC, ETEC, and other pathotypes) in children accounts for less than 0.4% of the cases (Fletcher et al., 2013) while the detection rate of E. coli in adults (>12 years) is even lower. In Spain, EPEC, STEC, and EAEC are the E. coli pathotypes most commonly isolated in clinical samples (Blanco et al., 2006). However, there is limited knowledge about the occurrence and quantitative burden of E. coli VGs in healthy individuals, which could help to evaluate results from clinically affected individuals.

The objective of this study was to evaluate if there were differences in the presentation and amount of VGs in feces from patients with diarrhea and a subpopulation of healthy individuals potentially exposed to certain E. coli pathotypes (veterinary students and laboratory staff) using a direct quantitative real-time PCR. Four serotype-related genes associated with the O157:H7 and O104:H4 serotypes (previously associated with outbreaks of importance in public health) were also investigated by qPCR. Additionally, we evaluated the association between certain individual characteristics and the presence and burden of VGs in the healthy population to identify factors promoting exposure.

Materials and Methods

Study Population

Feces from a total of 81 individuals from two different populations were collected. First, 49 samples from individuals belonging to a clinically affected population (“cases”) were selected randomly among those received during a 1-month period at the Ramón y Cajal Hospital (Madrid, Spain) from patients suffering from acute diarrhea (aqueous to mucoid) of an unknown origin. Information on the gender and age of the patients and the origin of the patient (hospitalization area, emergency room or primary health center) were recovered from the clinical chart from all but three patients. Samples from 30 female and 16 male patients were included in the study, with ages ranging from 1 to 94 years old. Thirty-three went to their Primary Health Center, 10 went directly to the Hospital and 3 were admitted in the Emergency room. None of the patients had received antimicrobial treatment before their samples were collected.

The healthy population (“controls”) consisted of 20 veterinary students at the University Complutense and 12 members of the VISAVET Health Surveillance Center staff (20 females and 12 males with ages ranging between 18 and 44 years) that volunteered to participate in the project. None of them presented any gastrointestinal symptoms when the samples were collected. Information on the gender, eating habits, traveling history, previous intestinal illnesses, and antimicrobial therapy were collected using a questionnaire (available upon request). This study was authorized by the Ethics Committee for Clinical Research from the Hospital Ramon y Cajal (Reference 098/12).

VG Detection

Gene selection was made based on a previous study (Cabal et al., 2013) so that it included the most representative VGs from the intestinal pathotypes of E. coli and four genes associated with relevant serotypes for public health (Supplementary Table S1).

Three grams of the fecal samples were mixed individually with 3 ml of PBS (1/2 dilution) and homogenized vigorously. Four-hundred milligrams of the resulting solution were used for DNA extraction, which was performed using a commercial kit (Qiagen DNA stool mini kit) according to the manufacturer’s instructions. Then, the amplification of the targets was performed using a real-time PCR assay (qPCR) as previously described (Cabal et al., 2015). Briefly, for detection of VGs, a conventional PCR was first performed using specific primers (Supplementary Table S2) for control strains (see below) to obtain specific PCR products, which were ten-fold diluted in order to generate the standard curves. For the serotype related genes, 10-fold dilutions of STEC control strains were performed and further used for building the standards needed for the qPCR. Then, qPCR analysis of the clinical samples was carried out using primers and probes described in Supplementary Tables S1 and S3, and quantification was achieved using the standard curves generated as explained below. The final gene copy number per milligram of sample was estimated taking into account the initial weight of the stool, the dilution factor and the DNA volume added to the qPCR.

The following E. coli control strains were included in all qPCR reactions as positive controls and were also used to generate the standard curves: STEC O157:H7 (strain CNM 2686/03 positive to stx1, sxt2, eae, and ehxA), a typical EPEC (strain CNM764, positive to bfpA, and eae), provided by Dr. Silvia Herrera León (National Center of Microbiology, Institute of Health Carlos III, Madrid, Spain), ETEC (strain H10407, positive to elt, and est), one EIEC (strain 1280 positive to invA), and the EAEC/EHEC outbreak strain (LB226692 positive to aggR and stx2), provided by Dr. Martina Bielaszewska (Institute of Hygiene, Munster University, Münster, Germany).

Statistical Analysis

The proportion of positive samples and the quantitative results for each gene in the case and control groups were compared using Pearson’s and Fisher’s Exact χ2 tests and Mann–Whitney tests, respectively. In addition, results of the PCR analysis among the controls were also compared depending on their individual characteristics. Calculations were performed using SPSS V20.0 (IBM, Chicago, IL, USA).

Results

Qualitative results obtained in case and control samples are depicted in Table 1. The most prevalent VGs among patients were eae (n = 45; 91.8%), aggR (n = 31; 63.3%), and invA (n = 40; 81.6%), while eae (n = 30; 93.8%), and aggR (n = 16; 50%) were the most commonly found VGs in the controls (Table 1). EhxA and bfpA were both moderately represented in patients (n = 20; 40.8% and n = 14; 28.6%) and controls (n = 5; 15.6% and n = 10; 31.3%), respectively. Stx1 was infrequent in both groups (n = 2; 4.1% in patients and n = 1; 3.1% in controls). Stx2 was only detected in controls (n = 1, 3.1%) while est was only found in patients (n = 1; 2%). Interestingly, the elt gene was not found in any case or control sample. InvA, ehxA, and the simultaneous presence of rfbO157 with fliCH7 were significantly more prevalent (p < 0.05) in the diarrheal patients than in healthy controls, while the opposite was true for the simultaneous detection of both wzxO104 and fliCH4 (Table 1).

TABLE 1
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TABLE 1. Percentage and 95% confidence intervals (CI) of the proportion of samples positive to each molecular target in patients (cases) and healthy volunteers (controls).

No significant differences between age or sex and detection of VGs were detected in any of the two groups. Analysis of the information collected in the survey of the control population revealed that a significantly higher proportion of this group was positive for the rfbO157 gene among those taking antibiotics in comparison with those who did not (p = 0.01). Marginally significant differences between the presence of ehxA and the consumption of antibiotics was also observed (higher in those taking antibiotics, p = 0.057). Also, proportion of controls positive to aggR and bfpA was marginally significantly higher (p = 0.1 and p = 0.08, respectively) among those with travel history (Table 2). No significant differences in the proportion of positive samples to any other VG and the variables under study were detected.

TABLE 2
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TABLE 2. Characteristics of the control population and proportion of positive samples to the virulence genes (VGs) for which marginally significant (p < 0.1) differences were found.

In the quantitative analysis, only VGs that were present in at least five samples (ehxA, eae, aggR, bfpA, rfbO157, fliCH7, and fliCH4) were considered (Table 3). Within these analyses, no significant differences between the quantitative values found in each group were detected, except for the fliCH4 gene [with a significantly (p < 0.007) higher number of gene copies per milligram of sample in the control group]. Marginally significant differences were found for aggR and invA, present at higher quantities in the patients (p = 0.07 and 0.084, respectively). In healthy controls, the maximum gene copy number for a given VG per milligram of feces was always under 10e+04. In contrast, for the patients, there was a maximum of 10e+07 gene copy number. If a tentative cut-off value was established so that patients with gene copy numbers per milligram of feces >10e+03 (Cabal et al., 2015) were considered positive for that VG, only four patients would be positive for VGs from pathogenic E. coli compared to one control. Those four patients with copy numbers above 10e+03 for at least one VG were positive to eae/aggR/est, aggR/invA, eae/bfpA, and eae, respectively.

TABLE 3
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TABLE 3. Quantitative values (median) for VGs present in at least five samples in patients and controls.

Discussion

In this study, we estimated the qualitative and quantitative (gene copy number per milligram of sample) abundance of VGs in the feces of two groups of individuals, healthy volunteers and patients with diarrhea. Overall, the prevalence of VGs in both groups was high. In fact, while the presence of VGs in the feces of patients with diarrhea was expected to some extent, healthy controls carried VGs as well (Stephan et al., 2000; Fujihara et al., 2009). Humans have been proven to act sometimes as mere carriers of these VGs without being necessarily related with intestinal disease (Jenkins et al., 2007) since they may need to coexist with other VGs and eventually in an adequate microorganisms to produce clinical symptoms (Rosenshine et al., 1996; Barletta et al., 2011). The high prevalence observed may be due in part to the analytical approach adopted here, since qPCR-based direct detection of DNA extracted from fecal samples may yield a higher analytic sensitivity than isolation of E. coli followed by PCR-detection.

The aggR gene was observed at high prevalence in both patients (63.3%) and controls (50%), in contrast with a similar study by Samie et al. (2007) that described higher prevalence of aggR in the patient group. However, the higher numbers of gene copies in positive case samples compared to the controls, which was close to the statistical significance (Table 3), was in line with the findings of that study, suggesting that that aggR may contribute to the patient symptoms (Samie et al., 2007).

The wzxO104/fliCH4 combination, recently associated with EAEC (Bielaszewska et al., 2011), was more common in healthy individuals (18.8%) than in patients (2.04%), with most of these positive control samples being positive also to aggR (4/6 and 66.7%), suggesting asymptomatic carriage of EAEC and/or EAEC/EHEC as previously reported (Mathewson et al., 1985; Balabanova et al., 2013).

In contrast, the prevalence and quantities of bfpA, which may indicate presence of tEPEC, was similar in both patients and healthy individuals, suggesting a limited pathogenic role as previously proposed (Wang et al., 2013). Interestingly, the marginally significant differences found in the controls who traveled abroad for bfpA but also for aggR may indicate that EPEC and EAEC are the pathotypes most probably acquired during international travels, as previously described (Tangden et al., 2010; Laaveri et al., 2014). Detection of other tEPEC virulence markers in bfpA-positive samples could help in elucidating the real role of bfpA in disease pathogenesis.

In the case of eae, its large prevalence (>90%) in bfpA-negative fecal samples could indicate the presence of aEPEC. In addition, the fact that eae frequencies were similar in both groups was in agreement with previous studies (Fujihara et al., 2009; Ghosh and Ali, 2010; Schmidt, 2010), and therefore it also questions its potential pathogenic role in our study population.

The low prevalence found for stx-genes was in agreement with that reported by Pradel et al. (2000), which was also similar for both patients and controls. Still, the high frequencies obtained for eae, ehxA, and rfbO157/fliCH7 genes (particularly among case samples) may indicate the presence of O157:H7 strains despite the low prevalence obtained for the Shiga toxins. It has been shown that both EPEC and EHEC O157:H7 strains can exist in patients with HUS or diarrhea (Ferdous et al., 2015), and a whole genome analysis approach would be needed to differentiate them.

In the case of EIEC, represented in this study by invA, the high prevalence obtained for patients together with a higher gene copy number in this group could indicate that invA is directly related with pathogenicity, thus explaining its absence (or presence at very low levels) in healthy controls (Labbé and García, 2013). Bruijnesteijn van Coppenraet et al. (2015) also found EIEC-typical genes in a significantly higher proportion of cases compared with a control population, while no differences were observed for STEC-associated genes.

Lastly, detection rates for est and/or elt, usually associated with the ETEC pathotype and therefore with Traveler’s diarrhea, were low among diarrheal patients, although interpretation of these results is not possible due to the lack of information on the patient’s travel history (Qadri et al., 2005; Rivera et al., 2013). Among the variables included in the survey performed in the control population, we only observed a significant association between ehxA or rfbO157 and antibiotic intake (Table 2). A marginally significant association between aggR or bfpA and foreign travel was seen in agreement with previous reports (Evans and Evans, 1996; Jiang et al., 2002).

Comparison of results obtained in the case and control populations obtained here must be performed carefully since, while cases were sampled randomly among those submitted to a large hospital in Madrid, our control population was severely biased toward a very specific subpopulation (veterinary students and laboratory staff) that could be exposed to certain risks (i.e., STEC of animal origin), and may thus not be representative of the general population. Interestingly, prevalence of VGs associated with STEC (i.e., stx1, and stx2) was very low in both cases and controls (Table 1), thus suggesting a non-differential degree of exposure to sources of this particular pathotype. Another limitation was the limited size of our sample; even though matching by age and sex could have helped to increase the power of the study, this information was not available when controls were recruited and was thus not possible.

In summary, our strategy allowed the assessment of the prevalence and abundance of VGs associated with diarrheagenic E. coli in healthy volunteers and also in patients with diarrhea. In some cases both groups were carriers of the same VGs, highlighting the fact that not all VGs might be linked with pathogenicity or may need additional association with other VG to produce diarrhea. Moreover, the VG quantification could help to determine whether a VG is crucial for the onset of the diarrhea or not and may facilitate the isolation of positive colonies. Although some individual characteristics were marginally associated with increased odds of being positive for certain VGs in the control population, the limited sample size used here prevents extracting definitive conclusions.

Author Contributions

RC, CG, LD, and JÁ conceived and designed the study. AC and MG-C collected the samples and performed the laboratory analyses. AC and JÁ analyzed the data and drafted the first version of the manuscript. All authors revised the manuscript critically and contributed to the final version.

Funding

This work is a contribution to EU FP7 ANTIGONE (project number 278976). JÁ was a recipient of a Sara Borrell postdoctoral contract (CD11/00261, Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación).

Conflict of Interest Statement

The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest.

Acknowledgments

Authors would like to thank all people who volunteered to participate in the present study. Authors are grateful to Dr. K. VanderWaal for her help editing the final manuscript.

Supplementary Material

The Supplementary Material for this article can be found online at: http://journal.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fmicb.2016.00641

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Keywords: E. coli, diarrhea, virulence genes, pathotypes, prevalence

Citation: Cabal A, García-Castillo M, Cantón R, Gortázar C, Domínguez L and Álvarez J (2016) Prevalence of Escherichia coli Virulence Genes in Patients with Diarrhea and a Subpopulation of Healthy Volunteers in Madrid, Spain. Front. Microbiol. 7:641. doi: 10.3389/fmicb.2016.00641

Received: 21 January 2016; Accepted: 18 April 2016;
Published: 02 May 2016.

Edited by:

Paul D. Brown, University of the West Indies, Jamaica

Reviewed by:

Mirjam Kooistra-Smid, University Medical Center Groningen, Netherlands
Marquita Vernescia Gittens-St.Hilaire, University of the West Indies, Barbados

Copyright © 2016 Cabal, García-Castillo, Cantón, Gortázar, Domínguez and Álvarez. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) or licensor are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.

*Correspondence: Julio Álvarez, jalvarez@umn.edu

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