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Virulence Factors Associated with Pediatric Shigellosis in Brazilian Amazon
Author(s) -
Carolinie Batista Nobre da Cruz,
Maria Carolina Scheffer de Souza,
Paula Taquita Serra,
Ivanildes dos Santos Bastos,
Antônio Alcirley da Silva Balieiro,
Fábio Alessandro Pieri,
Paulo Afonso Nogueira,
Patrícia Puccinelli Orlandi
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
biomed research international
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.772
H-Index - 126
eISSN - 2314-6141
pISSN - 2314-6133
DOI - 10.1155/2014/539697
Subject(s) - shigellosis , shigella , virulence , diarrhea , shigella dysenteriae , dysentery , bacillary dysentery , shigella flexneri , typing , biology , microbiology and biotechnology , algorithm , medicine , gene , escherichia coli , genetics , computer science
Shigellosis is a global human health problem and the incidence is highest among children. In the present work, main Shigella virulence genes was examined by PCR and compared to symptoms of pediatric shigellosis. Thirty Shigella isolates were identified from an etiologic study at which 1,339 children ranging 0–10 years old were enrolled. S. flexneri was the most frequent species reaching 60.0% of isolates, 22.2% were S. sonnei , and 6.6% were both S. dysenteriae and S. boydii . All Shigella infected children had diarrhea, but not all were accompanied by others symptoms of bacillary dysentery. Among major virulence genes, the PCR typing revealed ipaBCD was present in all isolates, followed by IpaH7.8 , set-1A , set-1B, sen/ospD3, virF, and invE . The pathogenic potential of the ShET-1B subunit was observed in relation to dehydration ( P < 0.001) and ShET-2 related to the intestinal injury ( P = 0.033) evidenced by the presence of bloody diarrhea. Our results show associations among symptoms of shigellosis and virulence genes of clinical isolates of Shigella spp.

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