4.7 Article

Occurrence, Serotypes and Virulence Characteristics of Shiga-Toxin-Producing Escherichia coli Isolates from Goats on Communal Rangeland in South Africa

Journal

TOXINS
Volume 14, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/toxins14050353

Keywords

goats; STEC; serotypes; virulence; South Africa

Funding

  1. National Research Foundation (NRF) of South Africa [CSRP170528234222]
  2. National Research Foundation (NRF) of South Africa (SARCHI COP Grant) [120317]
  3. South African Medical Research Council [MRC/SIR 2017-2019]
  4. UNICEF Future Africa-UP One Health for Change research grants-2021

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This study investigated the occurrence of Shiga-toxin-producing Escherichia coli (STEC) in goat fecal samples in South Africa. It found that goats in South Africa are a reservoir of diverse STEC serotypes, including some that are potentially virulent to humans. Further molecular characterization is needed to fully understand the virulence potential of these goat STEC isolates and their ability to cause disease in humans.
Shiga-toxin-producing Escherichia coli is a foodborne pathogen commonly associated with human disease characterized by mild or bloody diarrhea hemorrhagic colitis and hemolytic uremic syndrome. This study investigated the occurrence of STEC in fecal samples of 289 goats in South Africa using microbiological culture and PCR. Furthermore, 628 goat STEC isolates were characterized by serotype (O:H) and major virulence factors by PCR. STEC was found in 80.2% (232/289) of goat fecal samples. Serotyping of 628 STEC isolates revealed 63 distinct serotypes including four of the major top seven STEC serogroups which were detected in 12.1% (35/289) of goats: O157:H7, 2.7% (8/289); O157:H8, 0.3%, (1/289); O157:H29, 0.3% (1/289); O103:H8, 7.6% (22/289); O103:H56, 0.3% (1/289); O26:H2, 0.3% (1/289); O111:H8, 0.3% (1/289) and 59 non-O157 STEC serotypes. Twenty-four of the sixty-three serotypes were previously associated with human disease. Virulence genes were distributed as follows: stx1, 60.6% (381/628); stx2, 72.7% (457/628); eaeA, 22.1% (139/628) and hlyA, 78.0% (490/628). Both stx1 and stx2 were found in 33.4% (210/628) of isolates. In conclusion, goats in South Africa are a reservoir and potential source of diverse STEC serotypes that are potentially virulent for humans. Further molecular characterization will be needed to fully assess the virulence potential of goat STEC isolates and their capacity to cause disease in humans.

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