Abstract

Enteropathogenic Escherichia coli (EPEC) that are known to cause severe diarrhoea in children and young rabbits are well characterized, but there are few reports on the serotypes and intimin ( eae) types of EPEC in weaned pigs. Based on detection of the eae gene by PCR and by DNA-hybridisation with LEE specific gene probes, 20 intestinal and 17 faecal eae + strains from diarrhoeal (164) and non-diarrhoeal (57) weaned pigs from 13 Hungarian farms, representing 12.8% of diarrhoeal and 14.0% of non-diarrhoeal pigs, were identified. The dominant serotype was O123:H11 (40%) among intestinal, and O108:H9 (23%) among faecal strains. The majority (85%) of the intestinal strains possessed eae-β and 10% carried eae-γ gene. In contrast, significantly ( p < 0.025) fewer faecal strains (53%) harboured the eae-β gene, and 23% were eae-γ positive. In vitro adhesion tests of intestinal and faecal eae + strains indicated adhesion of 20/37 of the strains to PK15 (porcine kidney) cells while only 3/37 strains adhered to HeLa cells. The ultrastructure of intimate bacterial attachment of representative porcine eae + strains to PK15 cells showed no pedestal formation, in contrast to the human EPEC (O127:H5, eae-α) strain. In conclusion, the data do not demonstrate a significant role for the eae + E. coli in porcine post-weaning diarrhoea, but provide new information on a dominant porcine serotype (O123:H11, eae-β), and on differences of serotypes and intimin types of porcine eae + strains according to their site of isolation. Furthermore there was an indication that the PK15 cell line could be used as a model to study in vitro adherence of eae + E. coli of some human and porcine origin.

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