Screening for enteropathogenic Escherichia coli in infants with diarrhea by the fluorescent-actin staining test.

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RESUMO

The attaching effacing (AE) adherence property is now recognized as an important virulence characteristic of enteropathogenic Escherichia coli (EPEC). The fluorescent-actin staining (FAS) test (S. Knutton, T. Baldwin, P. H. Williams, and A. S. McNeish, Infect. Immun. 57:1290-1298, 1989), which is diagnostic for the AE lesions produced by EPEC (and Vero cytotoxin-producing E. coli), has provided an additional tool with which to investigate this important class of enteric pathogens. In this study, we screened for the AE adherence property in two groups of E. coli isolated from infants with diarrhea by using the FAS test and compared the results with those from O:H serotyping, localized adhesion to HEp-2 cells (LA), and the EPEC adherence factor (EAF) probe. Only 16 of 41 (39%) E. coli strains previously diagnosed as EPEC by O antigen serogrouping were FAS test positive, and of these only 12 belonged to recognized EPEC O:H serotypes; 9 strains which did belong to EPEC O:H serotypes were FAS test negative. Of a second group of 297 untyped E. coli, 7 (2.3%) were FAS test positive, and of these only 2 belonged to EPEC serogroups; 5 belonged to serogroups not regarded as EPEC serogroups or were nontypeable. Of the 23 FAS-test-positive strains identified, 10 were EAF probe positive and showed good LA; 13 were EAF probe negative and showed a quantitatively distinctly poor LA. EAF-positive and EAF-negative strains, however, showed equally good adhesion to human small intestinal mucosa. None of the FAS-test-positive E. coli hybridized with probes for Vero toxins 1 or 2. We conclude that the FAS test is diagnostic not only for classical EPEC and Vero cytotoxin-producing E. coli but also for EPEC strains which are not currently being diagnosed because they belong to serotypes not generally regarded as EPEC serotypes.

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