Isolation of <i>Escherichia coli</i> Bacteriophages from the Stool of Pediatric Diarrhea Patients in Bangladesh

Sandra Chibani-Chennoufi(Nestlé (Switzerland)), J Sidoti(Nestlé (Switzerland)), Anne Bruttin(Nestlé (Switzerland)), Marie-Lise Dillmann(Nestlé (Switzerland)), Elizabeth Kutter(The Evergreen State College), Firdausi Qadri(International Centre for Diarrhoeal Disease Research), Shafiqul Alam Sarker(International Centre for Diarrhoeal Disease Research), Harald Brüssow(Nestlé (Switzerland))
Journal of Bacteriology
December 2, 2004
Cited by 85Open Access
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Abstract

A 3-week coliphage survey was conducted in stool samples from 140 Bangladeshi children hospitalized with severe diarrhea. On the Escherichia coli indicator strain K803, all but one phage isolate had 170-kb genomes and the morphology of T4 phage. In spot tests, the individual T4-like phages infected up to 27 out of 40 diarrhea-associated E. coli, representing 22 O serotypes and various virulence factors; only five of them were not infected by any of these new phages. A combination of diagnostic PCR based on g32 (DNA binding) and g23 (major capsid protein) and Southern hybridization revealed that half were T-even phages sensu strictu, while the other half were pseudo-T-even or even more distantly related T4-like phages that failed to cross-hybridize with T4 or between each other. Nineteen percent of the acute stool samples yielded T4-like phages, and the prevalence was lower in convalescent stool samples. T4-like phages were also isolated from environmental and sewage water, but with low frequency and low titers. On the enteropathogenic E. coli strain O127:K63, 14% of the patients yielded phage, all of which were members of the phage family Siphoviridae with 50-kb genomes, showing the morphology of Jersey- and beta-4 like phages and narrow lytic patterns on E. coli O serotypes. Three siphovirus types could be differentiated by lack of cross-hybridization. Only a few stool samples were positive on both indicator strains. Phages with closely related restriction patterns and, in the case of T4-like phages, identical g23 gene sequences were isolated from different patients, suggesting epidemiological links between the patients.


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