801. Invasion of bovine epithelial cells by verocytotoxin-producing Escherichia coli O157:H7.
- Author
-
Matthews KR, Murdough PA, and Bramley AJ
- Subjects
- Animals, Cattle, Cell Line, Escherichia coli O157 metabolism, HeLa Cells microbiology, Humans, Microscopy, Electron, Scanning, Bacterial Adhesion, Epithelial Cells microbiology, Escherichia coli O157 physiology, Shiga Toxin 1 biosynthesis
- Abstract
The ability of verocytotoxin-producing Escherichia coli (VTEC) O157:H7 to enter selected human (RPMI-4788 and HeLa) and bovine (MAC-T, mammary secretory; MDBK, kidney) epithelial cell lines was evaluated. All VTEC evaluated efficiently entered RPMI-4788 and MAC-T cell lines. VTEC entered MDBK cells at approximately 4% of MAC-T cells. VTEC were not able to invade HeLa cells. Presence of plasmid had no influence on efficiency of entry, nor did production of shiga-like toxin (SLT I or SLT II). Internalization required microfilaments, but not microtubules. Two types of adherence, localized and diffuse, were exhibited depending on isolate and cell line evaluated. Ability of VTEC to invade bovine mammary epithelial cells may be important in pathogenesis in the bovine, may indicate a route by which raw milk may potentially become contaminated, and may provide a reservoir of bacteria for the contamination of workers, equipment and carcass at time of slaughter.
- Published
- 1997
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