Abstract

32 different strains of Escherichia coli isolated from rabbits with diarrhoea were studied for cell-surface properties which may be involved in intestinal colonisation. Strains isolated from diarrhoeic suckling (6 strains) and weaning (26 strains) rabbits which were shown to attach to brush borders in vivo, showed high relative cell-surface hydrophobicity as determined by the Salt Aggregation Test (SAT) when grown on Colonisation Factor Antigen (CFA) agar at 33°C. Cells of these strains grown to express surface hydrophobicity were also defined as high, moderate or low binders of 125I-fibronectin or its 125I-29-kDa fragment in a standard binding assay. Based on these findings, we propose that binding to intestinal cell surface (mucus)-associated fibronectin may be an early important step in intestinal colonisation of the small bowel in enteropathogenic E. coli (EPEC) diarrhoea in rabbits and other animal species.

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