Abstract

Shiga toxin-producing Escherichia (E.) coli (STEC) are zoonotic foodborne pathogens of significant public health importance. While ruminants are considered the main reservoir, wild animals are increasingly acknowledged as carriers and potential reservoirs of STEC. The aim of this study was to determine the occurrence of STEC in a total of 59 faecal samples of hunted wild boars (Sus scrofa) from two different regions in Switzerland (canton Thurgau in northern Switzerland and canton Ticino in southern Switzerland), and to characterise the isolates using a whole genome sequencing approach. After an enrichment step, Shiga-toxin encoding genes (stx) were detected by real-time PCR in 41 % (95 % confidence interval (95 %CI) 0,29 - 0,53) of the samples, and STEC were subsequently recovered from 22 % (95 %CI 0,13 - 0,34) of the same samples. Seven different serotypes and six different sequence types (STs) were found, with O146:H28 ST738 (n = 4) and O100:H20 ST2514 (n = 4) predominating. Subtyping of stx identified isolates with stx1c/stx2b (n = 1), stx2a (n = 1), stx2b (n = 6), and stx2e (n = 6). No isolate contained the eae gene, but all harboured additional virulence genes, most commonly astA (n = 10), hlyE (n = 9), and hra (n = 9). STEC O11:H5, O21:H21, and O146:H28 harboured virulence factors associated with extra-intestinal pathogenic E. coli (ExPEC), and STEC O100:H20 and O155:H26 possessed sta1 and/or stb and were STEC/enterotoxigenic E. coli (ETEC) hybrid pathotypes. Our results show that wild boars are carriers of STEC which may be distributed in the environment, possibly leading to the contamination of agricultural crops and water sources. The serogroups included STEC O146 which belongs to the most common non-O157 serogroups associated with human illness in Europe, with implications for public health. Since Stx2e-producing STEC have frequently been reported in swine and pork, STEC O100:H20 harbouring stx2e in faeces of wild boars may be relevant to free-range systems of pig farming because of the potential risk of transmission events at thewildlife-livestock interface.

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