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Combined Multilocus Sequence Typing and O Serogrouping DistinguishesEscherichia coliSubtypes Associated with Infant Urosepsis and/or Meningitis
Author(s) -
Philippe Bidet,
Farah MahjoubMessai,
Jorge Blanco,
Jesús E. Blanco,
Marie Dehem,
Y. Aujard,
Édouard Bingen,
Stéphane Bonacorsi
Publication year - 2007
Publication title -
the journal of infectious diseases
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.69
H-Index - 252
eISSN - 1537-6613
pISSN - 0022-1899
DOI - 10.1086/518897
Subject(s) - multilocus sequence typing , virulence , biology , ribotyping , neonatal meningitis , serotype , typing , microbiology and biotechnology , genotype , meningitis , polymerase chain reaction , genetics , escherichia coli , virology , gene , medicine , psychiatry
The genetic relatedness of 223 invasive Escherichia coli strains that cause either meningitis or urosepsis without meningitis in young infants was determined by multilocus sequence typing (MLST), ribotyping, and phylogenetic polymerase chain reaction grouping. We also determined the serotypes and virulence genotypes (on the basis of 11 virulence genes). The strains belonged to 29 sequence type complexes (STc), 20 ribotypes, 26 O serogroups, and 39 virulence genotypes. MLST combined with O serogrouping identified 49 subtypes, or "sequence O types." Some sequence O types were almost exclusively associated with either urosepsis (STc27(O2), STc27(O6), and STc29(O2)) or meningitis (STc29(O18)). In contrast, STc29(O45) was equally frequent in these 2 infection sites. Similarly, several virulence genotypes were specifically associated with one of these syndromes. These results point to the existence of specialized invasive subtypes that cause urosepsis or meningitis in infants and identify a new dually virulent invasive clone.

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