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Contribution of Efa1/LifA to the adherence of enteropathogenic Escherichia coli to epithelial cells

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-01, 09:18 authored by L. Badea, S. Doughty, Larissa Nicholls, J Sloan, Roy Robins-Browne, EL Hartland
Enteropathogenic E. coli(EPEC) is an important diarrhoeal pathogen that induces characteristic lesions on the host intestine termed attaching and effacing (A/E) lesions. In this study we have examined the contribution of a large gene, efa1, which is present in all A/E pathogens, to the adherence phenotype of EPEC. An efa-derivative of EPEC JPN15 was constructed and this mutant was significantly less adherent to epithelial cells than the parent strain. The JPN15 efa- derivative was FAS-positive, produced EspA filaments and showed comparable levels of EspA secretion to JPN15. In addition, polyclonal antibodies raised to Efa1 partially inhibited the adherence of JPN15 to cultured epithelial cells. In further work, we showed that human and rabbit hosts infected with an A/E pathogen produced antibodies to Efa1 and we observed that the truncated form of efa1 present in EHEC O157:H7 was specific to that serotype. Generally efa1 was present in its entirety in the genomes of other A/E pathogens. Overall our data suggest that Efa1 has host cell binding activity, at least in tissue culture, and that it is produced during infection. These findings suggest that Efa1 may play a direct role in the pathogenesis of infections caused by A/E pathogens.

History

Journal

Microbial Pathogenesis

Volume

34

Issue

5

Start page

205

End page

215

Total pages

11

Publisher

Academic Press

Place published

United Kingdom

Language

English

Copyright

© 2003 Elsevier Science Ltd.

Former Identifier

2006027761

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2012-06-08

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