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Genotypes and Pathogenicity of Cellulitis Isolates Reveal Traits That Modulate APEC Virulence

  • Nicolle Lima Barbieri,

    Affiliation Departamento de Biofísica, Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul, Porto Alegre, Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil

  • Aline Luísa de Oliveira,

    Affiliation Departamento de Biofísica, Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul, Porto Alegre, Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil

  • Thiago Moreira Tejkowski,

    Affiliation Instituto de Pesquisas Veterinárias Desidério Finamor, Eldorado do Sul, Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil

  • Daniel Brisotto Pavanelo,

    Affiliation Departamento de Biofísica, Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul, Porto Alegre, Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil

  • Débora Assumpção Rocha,

    Affiliation Departamento de Biofísica, Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul, Porto Alegre, Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil

  • Letícia Beatriz Matter,

    Affiliations Departamento de Biofísica, Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul, Porto Alegre, Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil, Departamento de Ciências da Saúde, Universidade Regional Integrada do Alto Uruguai e das Missões, Santo Ângelo, Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil

  • Sidia Maria Callegari-Jacques,

    Affiliation Departamento de Estatística, Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul, Porto Alegre, Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil

  • Benito Guimarães de Brito,

    Affiliation Instituto de Pesquisas Veterinárias Desidério Finamor, Eldorado do Sul, Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil

  • Fabiana Horn

    fabiana.horn@ufrgs.br

    Affiliation Departamento de Biofísica, Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul, Porto Alegre, Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil

Abstract

We characterized 144 Escherichia coli isolates from severe cellulitis lesions in broiler chickens from South Brazil. Analysis of susceptibility to 15 antimicrobials revealed frequencies of resistance of less than 30% for most antimicrobials except tetracycline (70%) and sulphonamides (60%). The genotyping of 34 virulence-associated genes revealed that all the isolates harbored virulence factors related to adhesion, iron acquisition and serum resistance, which are characteristic of the avian pathogenic E. coli (APEC) pathotype. ColV plasmid-associated genes (cvi/cva, iroN, iss, iucD, sitD, traT, tsh) were especially frequent among the isolates (from 66.6% to 89.6%). According to the Clermont method of ECOR phylogenetic typing, isolates belonged to group D (47.2%), to group A (27.8%), to group B2 (17.4%) and to group B1 (7.6%); the group B2 isolates contained the highest number of virulence-associated genes. Clonal relationship analysis using the ARDRA method revealed a similarity level of 57% or higher among isolates, but no endemic clone. The virulence of the isolates was confirmed in vivo in one-day-old chicks. Most isolates (72.9%) killed all infected chicks within 7 days, and 65 isolates (38.1%) killed most of them within 24 hours. In order to analyze differences in virulence among the APEC isolates, we created a pathogenicity score by combining the times of death with the clinical symptoms noted. By looking for significant associations between the presence of virulence-associated genes and the pathogenicity score, we found that the presence of genes for invasins ibeA and gimB and for group II capsule KpsMTII increased virulence, while the presence of pic decreased virulence. The fact that ibeA, gimB and KpsMTII are characteristic of neonatal meningitis E. coli (NMEC) suggests that genes of NMEC in APEC increase virulence of strains.

Introduction

Extraintestinal infections caused by avian pathogenic Escherichia coli (APEC) include omphalitis in embryos, salpingitis in laying hens, respiratory tract infections, and cellulitis [1]. Cellulitis is one of the most prevalent extraintestinal infections caused by APEC in broiler chickens, and is characterized by the presence of subcutaneous fibrinonecrotic plaques and inflammation of the overlying chicken skin, resulting in rejection of part or all of the carcasses at processing [2], [3], [4], [5]. In Brazil, cellulitis lesions are estimated to cause the loss of 0.14 to 1.4% of poultry meat production [6], leading to losses of at least 18 thousand tons of meat in 2011 [7]. Depending on the virulence of the strain, the localized infections may become systemic [8].

The virulence genes that permit certain intestinal commensal E. coli to become APEC and infect extraintestinal sites include those encoding for the adhesins type 1 fimbriae and temperature-sensitive haemagglutinin (Tsh), iron-scavenging systems and the protectin Iss [9]. Most of these genes are often carried on Colicin V (ColV) or other large plasmids, and are thought to enable APEC strains to adhere to host tissues, survive within host fluids and resist host immune defenses [10], [11], [12], [13]. Different APEC strains may have unique combinations of different virulence factors that have similar functions with regards to disease establishment. Despite our knowledge about the APEC pathotype, we still depend on in vivo assays to make sure that an E. coli isolate is able to cause an extraintestinal infection [14] and to determine the degree of virulence of the strain [8], [15].

By genotyping a North American collection of APEC strains of known virulence in one-day-old chicks [16], Johnson et al. [17] identified five ColV-associated genes that distinguish an APEC from a non-pathogenic strain. Schouler et al. [14] combined the virulence genotyping of a large European collection with in vivo virulence tests in one-day-old chicks to identify four groups of virulence genes associated with APEC. The virulence traits proposed by Johnson et al. [17] and Schouler et al. [14] represent potentially efficient ways for screening APEC strains occurring during poultry production. Neither work, however, allows the prediction of the degree of virulence of an APEC isolate.

In the present work we have genotyped 144 cellulitis isolates from broiler chickens in Southern Brazil and tested them for virulence in one-day-old chicks. We attributed a pathogenicity score to each isolate, which takes into account not only the number of deaths within 7 days, but also the clinical symptoms manifested before death and how quickly the infection kills birds. The pathogenicity score represents an improvement on the lethality test using the same number of animals, and may help to discriminate between different degrees of APEC virulence. We also characterized the isolates in terms of their resistance to 15 antimicrobial agents, their E. coli reference collection (ECOR) phylogenetic typing, and their clonal relationships.

Materials and Methods

Ethics statement

All animal experiments were approved by the Biosafety Committee of the Instituto de Pesquisas Veterinárias Desidério Finamor (CIB 004/08), and chickens were euthanized according to animal welfare norms.

Bacterial strains

One hundred and forty-four E. coli isolates were obtained between October 2006 and March 2007 from severe cellulitis lesions in 7-week-old broiler chickens at the time of their slaughter. The isolates were collected from different poultry flocks in 65 distinct farms in various locations within the southern Brazilian state of Paraná (PR). Farms could have more than one flock of broiler chickens: in order to ensure diversity of the strains, we collected only one isolate per flock. Biochemical tests (triple sugar iron, urease and MacConkey) were performed to confirm that all isolates were E. coli [18]. All strains were stored at –80°C in Luria-Bertani (LB) broth with 20% glycerol until they were needed.

Antibiotic resistance in APEC

The antimicrobial susceptibility of all APEC isolates was examined using the disc diffusion test according to the Clinical and Laboratory Standards Institute guidelines [18], using Escherichia coli strain ATCC 25922 as a control. The 15 antimicrobial agents tested were: ampicillin (10 U), bacitracin (10 U), cephalothin (30 µg), ceftiofur (30 µg), ciprofloxacin (5 µg), chloramphenicol (30 µg), enrofloxacin (5 µg), gentamicin (10 µg), neomycin (30 µg), nitrofurantoin (300 µg), norfloxacin (10 µg), tetracycline (30 µg), sulphonamides (300 µg), trimethoprim (5 µg) and a combination of sulphonamides and trimethoprim (23.7 µg plus 1.3 µg). All antimicrobial discs were from CEFAR (São Paulo, Brazil). These antimicrobials were selected because they are, or were previously, employed in the poultry industry as growth promoters, for disease prevention and/or for treatment. The breakpoints were obtained from CLSI 2009 [18] for all antimicrobials, except for ampicillin, cephalothin, chloramphenicol and enrofloxacin [19], ceftiofur [20] and neomycin [21].

DNA extraction

Bacterial DNA was obtained from whole organisms by boiling [22]. The extracts were stored at 4°C, and the supernatants were used as templates for gene amplification.

Multiplex polymerase chain reactions

The presence of 33 virulence-associated genes in the isolates (Table 1) was investigated using multiplex polymerase chain reactions as described [23] with a few modifications, as outlined in [22].

Table 1. Prevalence of VAGs in cellulitis isolates as detected by PCR.

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Table 1. Prevalence of VAGs in cellulitis isolates as detected by PCR.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0072322.t003

PCR-based classification into "ECOR" phylogenetic groups

All 144 isolates were classified using the multiplex PCR-based phylogenetic typing method of Clermont et al. [24], which groups strains into the four main phylogenetic groups shown in the reference strains in the ECOR collection [25]. Reactions were performed in a GenePro Thermal Cycler (Bioer Technology, China) as follows: denaturation for 4 min at 94°C, 30 cycles of 5 s at 94°C and 10 s at 59 °C, and a final extension step of 5 min at 72°C.

Phylogenetic analysis

Genetic data was obtained using the Amplified Ribosomal DNA Restriction Analysis (ARDRA) method [26]. This method is based on the variability of the ribosomal 16S-23S intergenic spacer region (ISR), which is well-distributed among isolates and has slow rates of mutation, and hence is considered useful for measuring intra-species diversity [26], [27]. The ISR region was amplified and digested with restriction enzymes (RsaI, HinfI or TaqI) as previously described [22]. ARDRA restriction fragment length polymorphism profiles were analyzed by eye, and were converted into two-dimensional binary matrices according to the following criteria: 1 if a band was present, and 0 if it was absent. A matrix of distances was calculated and a dendrogram was produced using the NTSYS-pc program (version 2.0, Exeter Software, Setauket, NY). The Unweighted Pair Group Method with the Arithmetic Mean (UPGMA) was used.

Lethality and pathogenicity tests

Groups of 10 one-day-old Cobb female chicks were inoculated subcutaneously with 100 µL (108 CFU) of an overnight culture containing ∼109 CFU/mL of each APEC isolate. A control group was inoculated with BHI broth. The animals were observed at 12 h intervals over 7 days, with all deaths being recorded. The lethality score (LS) was calculated according to the number of animals that died within this period with a range from 0 (no animal died) to 10 (all animals died) [2], [28]. At 7 days post-infection, surviving chicks were killed by cervical dislocation, and clinical scores were recorded. Times of death and clinical scores were combined to give pathogenicity scores (PS), as described by Barbieri et al. [22]. Briefly, we performed postmortem examinations after chick deaths, looking for evidence of airsacculitis (A), pericarditis (P), perihepatitis (Ph), peritonitis (Pe) and cellulitis (C). The presence of a lesion was given the value 1, and its absence, the value 0. Pathogenicity scores (PS) were calculated from the equation PS  =  (TD x 5) + P + Pe + Ph + A + C, in which TD corresponds to the day of chick death, which has a value of 1 if the animal dies on the first day, and is reduced by 0.14 for each day that the animal survives up to day 7, which has the value 0. According to this equation, the PS can vary from 0 to 10.

Animals that died on the first day after inoculation had their livers dissected, homogenized and plated on lactose-containing MacConkey agar to identify E. coli; a PS  =  10 score was attributed to these animals. The PS for each strain was calculated as the median PS for the 10 chicks infected with that particular strain.

RNA purification and quantitative real-time RT-PCR

E. coli strains PR001, PR013, PR017 and PR034 were grown overnight in BHI media. RNA from these strains was stabilized by RNAprotect Bacterial Reagent (QIAGEN) and extracted using an RNeasy Mini Kit (QIAGEN) with a one-hour in-tube DNase digestion (QIAGEN) to remove possible DNA contamination according to the manufacturer’s instructions. Two biological replicates of each sample were prepared. The concentration of RNA was determined using a Spectrophotometer (ND-1000) (NanoDrop).

For quantitative real-time RT-PCR, melting curve analyses were performed after each reaction to ensure amplification specificity. Differences (n-fold) in transcripts were calculated using the relative comparison method, and amplification efficacies of each primer set were verified as described by Schmittgen et al. [29]. RNA levels were normalized using the housekeeping gene tus encoding DNA replication terminus site-binding protein as endogenous control [30]. Quantitative real-time RT-PCR (qRT-PCR) was performed with a Bio-Rad iQ5 iCycler detection system using iScript one-step RT-PCR kit with SYBR Green (Bio-Rad) according to the manufacture’s instruction [31].

Statistical analysis

Pathogenicity and lethality scores, resistance and number of virulence-associated genes (VAGs) were treated as quantitative variables and described by mean ± standard deviation (SD). Data was analyzed using non-parametric tests due to asymmetry in their distributions, except for number of VAGs. For comparisons among ECOR groups, one-way ANOVA and the Kruskal-Wallis methods were used. The relationship between the presence of a gene and the pathogenicity score was analyzed using the Mann-Whitney test, by comparing the scores in isolates with and without this particular gene. All statistical analysis was carried out with the Statistical Package for the Social Sciences (IBM SPSS v.18.0) or WinPEPI v.11.18 (Abramson, J.H. WINPEPI updated: computer programs for epidemiologists, and their teaching potential. Epidemiologic Perspectives & Innovations 2011, 8:1). Statistical significance was accepted at p≤0.05.

Results

Antibiotic resistance among the APEC isolates

All 144 APEC isolates were tested for susceptibility to 15 antimicrobial agents that have, at some point, been commonly employed in the Brazilian poultry industry, either as growth promoters, to prevent infection and/or for treatment. It was found that the APEC isolates were susceptible to the majority of antimicrobials. The frequency of resistance to all the antimicrobials was less than 30% except for tetracycline and sulphonamides (with frequencies of 69.4% and 59.7% resistance, respectively) (Fig.1). For the exact resistance values, see the shadowed boxes in Figure 2.

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Figure 1. Antimicrobial susceptibility of cellulitis isolates.

The susceptibility of 144 APEC isolates to 15 antimicrobials was tested individually using disc diffusion tests.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0072322.g001

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Figure 2. Association between resistance to 15 antimicrobials, presence of 31 VAGs1 and ECOR group among 144 APEC isolates.

Numbers indicate the percentage of isolates that have both traits, while numbers in shadowed boxes indicate the percentage of isolates that have the corresponding trait; * p≤0.001 using χ2. ND, not determined.1 afa and cnf are not included, since they were not present in any strain, and csgA is not included, since it was present in all strains.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0072322.g002

With respect to the sites of antibiotic action, 29.2% of the isolates were resistant to at least one of the antimicrobials that act on the cell wall (ampicillin, bacitracin, cephalothin, ceftiofur); 11.8% were resistant to at least one of the antimicrobials that inhibit nucleic acid synthesis (ciprofloxacin, enrofloxacin, norfloxacin); 68.0% were resistant to at least one of the antimicrobials that block protein synthesis (chloramphenicol, gentamicin, neomycin, tetracycline; but the percentage was only 15.3% if tetracycline is excluded); and 59.7% were resistant to at least one of the antimicrobials that target folate synthesis (sulphonamides, trimethoprim, sulpha + trimethoprim; but only 29.2% if sulphonamides are excluded).

When we analyzed multi-resistance patterns, we observed that 18% of all isolates were susceptible to, or had intermediate resistance to, all antibiotics tested. Twenty per cent were resistant to at least one agent; 17% to 2; 19% to 3; and 11% to 4. Fifteen per cent were resistant to 5 or more, and one strain (PR133) was resistant to 10. It is noteworthy that there was no antimicrobial agent to which all 144 APEC strains were susceptible. Figure 2 shows the percentage of strains with resistance to given pairs of antimicrobials.

Genotyping by multiplex polymerase chain reaction

The prevalence of virulence-associated genes (VAGs) among the APEC isolates is shown in Table 1. The factors fimC, ompA, traT, csgA and crlA were the most frequent VAGs. Overall, the isolates had an average of 15.2 VAGs.

Virulence factors related to adhesion, iron acquisition and serum resistance were present in all strains, with the exception of strain PR010 (median PS 9.1; Fig. S1), which did not contain any of the iron acquisition systems tested. ColV plasmid-associated genes (iroN, iss, iucD, sitD, traT, tsh) occurred in the majority of the isolates (from 89.6 to 66.6%), although the ColV-encoding genes cvi/cva were present in only 57.6% of the isolates (Table 1). The factors afa/dra and cnf1/2 were not detected in any isolate, while csgA was detected in all the isolates. The VAGs harbored by each isolate are presented in Figure S1.

Lethality and pathogenicity tests

Lethality and pathogenicity tests in day-old chicks were used to evaluate the virulence of the APEC isolates as described in the Materials and Methods section, and the results for each strain are presented in Figure S1. Most isolates were lethal: 105 (72.9%) of the isolates killed all 10 chicks within 7 days (LS  =  10); 14 isolates (9.7%) killed 9 chicks, 9 isolates (6.2%) killed 8 chicks, 5 isolates (3.5%) killed 7, 4 isolates (2.8%) killed 6, 2 isolates (1.4%) killed 5, 3 isolates (2.1%) killed 4, 1 isolate killed 3 chicks (0.7%), and 1 killed 1 chicken (0.7%). Overall, the isolates had a lethality score of 9.26. None of the chicks inoculated with BHI or MG1655 (the negative controls) died.

In addition to the LS, we also determined the pathogenicity scores. The PS takes into account the clinical symptoms and how quickly the infection kills birds, in addition to how many chicks die within 7 days [22]. Thus, while an LS of 10 means that all 10 chicks died within seven days, a PS of 10 means that most of the 10 chicks died on the first day. Fifty-six isolates (38.1%) had a median PS  =  10; 36 (25%) had a 9.9 > median PS > 7.0; 42 (29.2%) had a 6.9 > median PS > 5.0; and 10 (6.9%) had a median PS lower than 5. Overall, the APEC isolates had a pathogenicity score of 8.01. Chicks inoculated with BHI displayed no signs of infection, while chicks inoculated with MG1655 displayed only small cellulitis lesions at the inoculation sites (Fig. 3). Figure 3 displays the data for a few isolates that illustrate different PS.

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Figure 3. Pathogenicity scores for MG1655 and five cellulitis isolates.

Ten one-day old chicks were infected with each isolate and observed for 7 days as described in the Materials and Methods section. Data points represent the PS for each chick, and horizontal bars represent the median PS for each isolate. Strain MG1655 was included as negative control.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0072322.g003

PCR-based classification into ECOR phylogenetic groups

We performed phylogenetic typing of the APEC isolates using the Clermont method [24]. This technique uses the chuA and YjaA genes and TspE4C2 fragment to allocate E. coli strains to phylogenetic groups A, B1, B2 and D. In previous studies, virulent extraintestinal strains were found to belong mainly to group B2 and, to a lesser extent, to group D, whereas most commensal strains belonged to group A [24], [25]. The distribution of our APEC isolates among the four phylogenetic groups is shown in Table 2. As determined by PCR, most of the strains (47.2%) belonged to group D.

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Table 2. ECOR groups among the 144 cellulitis isolates (within parentheses, number of strains) and respective mean and standard deviation for antimicrobial resistance, number of VAGs, lethality scores and pathogenicity scores.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0072322.t001

Table 2 also shows the mean number of antimicrobials to which the strains were resistant, and the mean number of VAGs and pathogenicity and lethality scores of strains according to their ECOR group. No statistical differences were observed among the phylogenetic groups in relation to resistance (p > 0.10). Isolates from group B2 possessed a significantly higher number of VAGs per strain, and the remaining groups did not differ in terms of the number of VAGs they possessed. Figure 2 shows the VAGs positively linked (p≤0.001) to ECOR groups A, B1, B2 and D. As for the lethality and pathogenicity scores, the B2 strains had on average the highest values, whereas the B1 and D groups had the lowest values.

In an attempt to find out what increases the virulence of APEC isolates in one-day-old chicks, we looked for significant associations between the presence of VAGs and pathogenicity scores (Table 3). We found that a higher PS was positively linked (p≤0.05) to the VAGs kpsMTII, gimB and ibeA, but negatively linked (p≤0.005) to pic.

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Table 3. Relationship between APEC pathogenicity score (PS) and presence of different genes.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0072322.t002

Expression of kpsMTII, gimB, ibeA and pic

We quantified the expression of kpsMTII, gimB, ibeA and pic in four strains that contain different combinations of these VAGs, namely PR01 (pic), PR013 (kpsMTII, gimB and ibeA), PR017 (kpsMTII and gimB) and PR034 (gimB, ibeA and pic), using tus as a housekeeping gene. Figure 4 shows that all strains expressed these genes.

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Figure 4. Expression of genes found to influence the PS.

Real-time quantitative RT-PCR was used to analyze the expression of kpsMTII, gimB, ibeA and pic in PR001, PR013, PR017 and PR034. ▵ct expresses ctmean subtracted of ctmean of tus (housekeeping gene) of the respective isolate. Data represent the average ± SD of two experiments done in triplicates.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0072322.g004

Phylogenetic Analysis

We used the ARDRA method to evaluate genetic diversity among the 144 isolates. A similarity matrix was generated based on the presence or absence of restriction bands and strains were clustered accordingly. The ARDRA profiles of the strains are shown in Figure S2. We found 104 different ARDRA profiles among the 144 isolates; 82 of them had distinct band patterns, while the remaining 62 isolates fell into 22 groups each containing 2 to 6 strains with the same band pattern. The majority of isolates with similar band patterns came from different farms, and only 4 of the 22 groups contained strains collected from the same farm (column “Origin” in Fig. S2). It is noteworthy that strains with the same band pattern have different virulence genotypes and could belong to distinct ECOR groups.

From the dendrogram, eight major clusters could be grouped at a similarity level of 80% or more (Fig. S2, right), with the majority of isolates falling into clusters A and B.

Discussion

Antimicrobial therapy is one of the primary control measures for reducing the morbidity and mortality caused by APEC infections. Since the indiscriminate use of antimicrobials leads to the selection of resistant isolates, they need to be used prudently in order to preserve their therapeutic usefulness in both animals and humans [32]. Among the 144 APEC strains isolated from cellulitis lesions in Brazil, the highest frequency of resistance was against tetracycline (69.4%), in agreement with the observations of others [33], [34], [35], [36], [37], [38], [39], [40]. This is not surprising since tetracycline has been used extensively for several decades, primarily as a feed additive in the poultry industry, and is the oldest antimicrobial on the market that was tested in this work. As a consequence, resistance to tetracycline has increased over the years.

Apart from tetracycline and sulphonamides, the frequency of resistance to the other antimicrobials was fairly low. Despite that, resistance to at least one antimicrobial was observed in almost all isolates (85.9%), and about half (54.6%) exhibited resistance to three or more antibiotics, as observed in previous work [35], [39], [40]. Frequencies of resistance to nitrofurantoin and sulpha + trimethoprim were much lower in the strains collected between 2006-2007 (this work) than in strains collected between 1998-2000 within the same Southern Brazilian region [2]. We expect that the increasing restrictions on the use of antimicrobials in the poultry industry will, in the near future, result in a considerably lower frequency of resistance of APEC strains to antimicrobial agents.

Our phylogenetic typing results showed that the APEC mainly belong to E. coli reference collection (ECOR) group D, in contrast to studies in the USA, China and Germany, in which most isolates were found to be in group A [17], [23], [41], [42], and in France where they were found to be in group B2 [43]. In all the cited studies, including ours, isolates belonging to group B1 were rare. Extraintestinal isolates from poultry seem, therefore, to be broadly distributed between groups A, B2 and D, but not group B1. It is important to note, however, that the multiplex-PCR method of Clermont et al. (2000) may sometimes classify strains actually belonging to group B1 as group A [24].

An APEC is defined as an E. coli isolated from an extraintestinal infection of birds. Since infections can be localized or systemic, and caused by more or less virulent strains, an APEC collection will include isolates with widely varying degrees of virulence. It can be argued that the higher the virulence of an APEC, the greater its potential to cause a systemic infection. Moreover, immunocompromised birds can be infected with less virulent APECs or even avirulent commensal E. coli. The genotyping of the 144 cellulitis isolates revealed that all of them harbor virulence factors related to adhesion, iron acquisition (with the exception of strain PR010) and serum resistance, which are characteristic of the APEC pathotype. Thus, as in previous reports [2], [4], [36], our results demonstrate that cellulitis APEC isolates are indistinguishable from septicemic APEC isolates on the basis of virulence factors. Yet the genotype does not guarantee that an extraintestinal E. coli is truly an APEC, so in vivo assays are necessary to confirm that the isolate does indeed cause infection.

Since it is not feasible to perform in vivo virulence tests on a large number of strains in 3- or 5-week-old chickens, large APEC collections are tested in one-day-old chicks [2], [14], [28], [43]. To analyze the virulence of our strains, we used lethality tests (LS) on one-day-old chicks. The majority of our strains were lethal to these chicks within 7 days, strongly suggesting that they were virulent APEC.

To better analyze the virulence of a given strain, we combined an analysis of organ lesions with how quickly the infection killed the chicks, to provide a pathogenicity score (PS), which is more likely to detect differences in virulence among APEC strains than the lethality score. Mortality and organ lesions in one-day-old chicks have previously been used to classify APEC strains as having high, intermediate or low pathogenicity [16], [44]. On the basis of their classification, the majority of our strains were found to be highly pathogenic; only ten had a PS lower than 5. Our phylogenetic analysis using ARDRA failed to identify a prevalent APEC clone. Instead, the population of cellulitis isolates proved to be diverse, with few strains belonging to the same clone.

We then analyzed which genes influenced the PS; we found that the presence of genes for invasins ibeA and gimB and for group II capsule KpsMTII increased virulence, while the presence of pic decreased virulence. The expression of these genes in BHI was confirmed by quantitative RT-PCR in four isolates. In agreement with these findings, it has been observed that APEC strains MT78 and IMT5155 caused a systemic infection when inoculated intratracheally into 5-week-old chickens, while UEL17 remained restricted to the lungs [8]. The main differences in the virulence genotypes among the three strains are the absence of ibeA, gimB, neuC and KpsMTII, and presence of pic in UEL17 [8]. Genes ibeA and KpsMTII have been associated with APEC virulence [45], [46]. Although ibeA, gimB and KpsMTII were not found to be present in the majority of APEC strains (Table 1) [17], [23], [45], [47] and cannot, therefore, be considered defining traits of APEC, they may be “significant but minority traits” in increasing APEC virulence [47]. Since ibeA, gimB and KpsMTII are characteristic of NMEC [23], [48], we may conclude that the genes that render an APEC more similar to NMEC increase virulence, and the zoonotic risk. Interestingly, Mora et al. [49] observed that the extraintestinal E. coli clonal group O25b:K1:H4-ST131 harboring ibeA and KpsMTII has recently emerged among APEC isolates.

The gene pic, like tsh, encodes a serine protease autotransporter protein, and was included in the screening of VAGs in APEC isolates [15], [23] because it had been implicated in UPEC virulence [50]. However, according to our results, the presence of pic was associated with decreased virulence of APEC in day-old chicks (Table 3). The construction of a pic mutant would help to elucidate its role in APEC virulence.

In summary, in this work, we genotyped and performed virulence tests in vivo on the largest number of APEC isolates from severe lesions of cellulitis described so far. In addition, our data provide a comprehensive overview of the susceptibility of cellulitis isolates currently found in south Brazil to antimicrobials and their phylogenetic status.

Supporting Information

Figure S1.

Characterization of 144 APEC isolates. Columns from left to right: Strain, isolate designation; Origin, source of the isolate; Resistance, number of antimicrobials to which the isolate was resistant; the subsequent columns depict the PCR results for all VAGs tested, with presence indicated in black and absence indicated in white (except for afa and cnf ½, which were absent from all isolates); no. VAGs, total number of VAGs in each isolate; LS, lethality score; PS median (range), median pathogenicity score (range); PS mean ± SD, mean pathogenicity score ± standard deviation; ECOR, ECOR phylogenetic group; Cluster, strains with 80% similarity were grouped into 8 genotypic clusterings (A to H).

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0072322.s001

(PDF)

Figure S2.

ARDRA profile of 144 APEC isolates. The ARDRA dendrogram was constructed by UPGMA based upon enzyme restriction digestion of amplified 16-23S DNA intergenic spacer regions. The column Strain shows isolate designation; the column Origin, source of isolate, with 1 to 65 designating each of the 65 farms from which the isolates were collected. Cluster designates the 8 genotypic clusters (A to H) into which strains with 80% similarity were grouped. E. coli ATCC25922 was analyzed as a reference strain.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0072322.s002

(TIF)

Acknowledgments

The authors are most grateful to Christa Ewers (Institute of Microbiology and Epizootics, Freie Universität Berlin, Germany) for the kind gift of strains IMT9096, IMT9267, and IMT7920, which were used as PCR positive controls, and to Ganwu Li and Catherine Logue (Veterinary Microbiology, Iowa State University, Ames, USA) for their help in the quantitative RT-PCR.

Author Contributions

Conceived and designed the experiments: NLB BGB FH. Performed the experiments: NLB TMT. Analyzed the data: NLB DBP SMCJ FH. Contributed reagents/materials/analysis tools: FH. Wrote the paper: NLB FH. Performed the ECOR determinations: ALO. Performed PCR for VAGs: DAR. Supervised the antimicrobial susceptibility tests: LBM. Performed the in vivo experiments in day-old chickens: TMT. Performed the statistical analyses: DBP SMCJ.

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