Abstract

Wastewater of human and animal may contain Shiga toxin-producing (STEC) and enteropathogenic (EPEC) Escherichia coli. We evaluated the prevalence of such strains in a wastewater treatment plant (WWTP) receiving both city and slaughterhouse wastewater. PCR screenings were performed on 12,248 E. coli isolates. The prevalence of STEC in city wastewater, slaughterhouse wastewater and treated effluent was 0.22%, 0.07% and 0.22%, respectively. The prevalence of EPEC at the same sampling sites was 0.63%, 0.90% and 0.55%. No significant difference was observed between the sampling points. Treatment had no impact on these prevalences. Enterohemorrhagic E. coli (EHEC) O157:H7 and O111:H8 were isolated from the treated effluent rejected into the river. The characteristics of STEC and EPEC differed according to their origin. City wastewater contained STEC with various stx subtypes associated with serious human disease, whereas slaughterhouse wastewater contained exclusively STEC with stx2e subtype. All the EPEC strains were classified as atypical and were screened for the ε, γ1 and β1 subtypes, known to be associated with the EHEC mainly involved in human infections in France. In city wastewater, eae subtypes remained largely unidentified; whereas eae-β1 was the most frequent subtype in slaughterhouse wastewater. Moreover, the EPEC isolated from slaughterhouse wastewater were positive for other EHEC-associated virulence markers, including top five serotypes, the ehxA gene, putative adherence genes and OI-122 associated genes. The possibility that city wastewater could contain a pool of stx genes associated with human disease and that slaughterhouse wastewater could contain a pool of EPEC sharing similar virulence genes with EHEC, was highlighted. Mixing of such strains in WWTP could lead to the emergence of EHEC by horizontal gene transfer.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call