4.2 Article

Comparison of Multilocus Sequence Analysis and Virulence Genotyping of Escherichia coli from Live Birds, Retail Poultry Meat, and Human Extraintestinal Infection

Journal

AVIAN DISEASES
Volume 57, Issue 1, Pages 104-108

Publisher

AMER ASSOC AVIAN PATHOLOGISTS
DOI: 10.1637/10218-042812-ResNote.1

Keywords

avian; Escherichia coli; colibacillosis; extraintestinal

Funding

  1. College of Veterinary Medicine at Iowa State University
  2. College of Veterinary Medicine at the University of Minnesota

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To examine the correlations between virulence genotyping and multilocus sequence analysis of Escherichia coli from poultry and humans, 88 isolates were examined. The isolates were selected from a population of over 1000 based on their assignment to nine different virulence genotyping clusters. Clustering based on multilocus sequence analysis mostly correlated with virulence genotyping, although multilocus sequence analysis demonstrated higher discriminatory ability and greater reliability related to inferred phylogenetic relationships. No distinct patterns in host source were observed using inferred phylogeny through multilocus sequence analysis, indicating that human, avian, and retail meat isolates are diverse, and some belong to multiple shared clonal complexes. Clonal complexes with host source overlap included ST95 and ST23 and additional novel groups, underscoring the diversity of avian pathogenic E. coli and the potential importance of these novel groups as avian and zoonotic pathogens.

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