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Genotypic and Phenotypic Characterization of Escherichia coli Isolates from Feces, Hands, and Soils in Rural Bangladesh via the Colilert Quanti-Tray System
Author(s) -
Timothy R. Julian,
Mohammad Aminul Islam,
Amy J. Pickering,
Subarna Roy,
Erica R. Fuhrmeister,
Ayşe Ercümen,
Angela Harris,
Jason Bishai,
Kellogg J. Schwab
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
applied and environmental microbiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.552
H-Index - 324
eISSN - 1070-6291
pISSN - 0099-2240
DOI - 10.1128/aem.03214-14
Subject(s) - feces , biology , escherichia coli , genotype , bacteria , indicator bacteria , microbiology and biotechnology , pathogen , veterinary medicine , fecal coliform , soil water , ecology , gene , genetics , water quality , medicine
The increased awareness of the role of environmental matrices in enteric disease transmission has resulted in the need for rapid, field-based methods for fecal indicator bacteria and pathogen detection. Evidence of the specificity of β-glucuronidase-based assays for detection ofEscherichia coli from environmental matrices relevant to enteric pathogen transmission in developing countries, such as hands, soils, and surfaces, is limited. In this study, we quantify the false-positive rate of a β-glucuronidase-basedE. coli detection assay (Colilert) for two environmental reservoirs in Bangladeshi households (hands and soils) and three fecal composite sources (cattle, chicken, and humans). We investigate whether or not the isolation source ofE. coli influences phenotypic and genotypic characteristics. Phenotypic characteristics include results of biochemical assays provided by the API-20E test; genotypic characteristics include the Clermont phylogroup and the presence of enteric and/or environmental indicator genessfmH ,rfaI , andfucK . Our findings demonstrate no statistically significant difference in the false-positive rate of Colilert for environmental compared to enteric samples.E. coli isolates from all source types are genetically diverse, representing six of the seven phylogroups, and there is no difference in relative frequency of phylogroups between enteric and environmental samples. We conclude that Colilert, and likely other β-glucuronidase-based assays, is appropriate for detection ofE. coli on hands and in soils with low false-positive rates. Furthermore,E. coli isolated from hands and soils in Bangladeshi households are diverse and indistinguishable from cattle, chicken, and human fecal isolates, using traditional biochemical assays and phylogrouping.

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