Laboratory investigations on the low pathogenic potential of Plesiomonas shigelloides.

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The pathogenic properties of 16 Plesiomonas shigelloides strains recovered from humans with extraintestinal and intestinal illnesses, infected animals, and environmental sources were investigated. Most strains possessed a high cell charge and low surface hydrophobicity analogous to those of Shigella spp.; additionally, serogroup O:17 strains reacted with Shigella group D antisera. However, unlike the shigellae, P. shigelloides strains did not universally bind Congo red, were noninvasive in HEp-2 cell assays, and did not produce a Shiga-like toxin on Vero cells. On HEp-2, Y1, and possibly Vero cells, a low-level cytolysin was consistently produced by all 16 P. shigelloides strains when grown in either Evan Casamino Acids-yeast extract or Penassay broth. The median 50% lethal dose for all 16 P. shigelloides strains in outbred Swiss Webster mice was 3.5 x 10(8) CFU (range, 3.2 x 10(7) to greater than 1 x 10(9) CFU). Animal pathogenicity did not correlate with cytolysin expression, possession of a greater than or equal to 120-MDa plasmid, protein profile, or resistance to complement-mediated lysis. No strain analyzed produced siderophores or a heat-stable enterotoxin. The results suggest that members of the genus Plesiomonas have an overall low pathogenic potential, irrespective of the site of isolation or phenotypic, serologic, or surface properties shared with other traditional enteropathogens.

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