Abstract

BackgroundCronobacter, formerly known as Enterobacter sakazakii, is a food-borne pathogen known to cause neonatal meningitis, septicaemia and death. Current diagnostic tests for identification of Cronobacter do not differentiate between species, necessitating time consuming 16S rDNA gene sequencing or multilocus sequence typing (MLST). The organism is ubiquitous, being found in the environment and in a wide range of foods, although there is variation in pathogenicity between Cronobacter isolates and between species. Therefore to be able to differentiate between the pathogenic and non-pathogenic strains is of interest to the food industry and regulators.ResultsHere we report the use of Expectation Maximization clustering to categorise 98 strains of Cronobacter as pathogenic or non-pathogenic based on biochemical test results from standard diagnostic test kits. Pathogenicity of a strain was postulated on the basis of either pathogenic symptoms associated with strain source or corresponding MLST sequence types, allowing the clusters to be labelled as containing either pathogenic or non-pathogenic strains. The resulting clusters gave good differentiation of strains into pathogenic and non-pathogenic groups, corresponding well to isolate source and MLST sequence type. The results also revealed a potential association between pathogenicity and inositol fermentation. An investigation of the genomes of Cronobacter sakazakii and C. turicensis revealed the gene for inositol monophosphatase is associated with putative virulence factors in pathogenic strains of Cronobacter.ConclusionsWe demonstrated a computational approach allowing existing diagnostic kits to be used to identify pathogenic strains of Cronobacter. The resulting clusters correlated well with MLST sequence types and revealed new information about the pathogenicity of Cronobacter species.

Highlights

  • Cronobacter, formerly known as Enterobacter sakazakii, is a food-borne pathogen known to cause neonatal meningitis, septicaemia and death

  • One clinical case, classified as non-pathogenic, was obtained from a breast abscess and it is plausible that this was a secondary infection it is not known if another infectious agent was isolated

  • Several sequence type (ST) 12 strains are from clinical sources and it is likely that all ST 12 strains will have similar pathogenic characteristics

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Summary

Introduction

Cronobacter, formerly known as Enterobacter sakazakii, is a food-borne pathogen known to cause neonatal meningitis, septicaemia and death. The organism has received a lot of attention recently due to its association with neonatal infections, especially meningitis, necrotizing enterocolitis, septicaemia and subsequent death [4,5] These bacteria have been isolated from a wide range of food stuffs [6,7,8], it is important to be able to detect Cronobacter species in food. It is known that type 4 strains (ST 4) are associated with meningitis [14], neither of the above methods is able to differentiate between pathogenic and non-pathogenic strains, they only identify individual species Both methods are time consuming compared with the use of biochemical diagnostic test kits which take 4-18 hours to produce results that can be interpreted

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