AI Article Synopsis

  • Enterohemorrhagic Escherichia coli (EHEC) is a major cause of foodborne illness in the U.S., leading to around 100,000 infections and 90 deaths each year, primarily from contaminated foods.
  • Researchers have found that colicins, antimicrobial proteins from E. coli, can effectively target and kill harmful EHEC strains when expressed in plants like tobacco, spinach, and leafy beets.
  • Specifically, a combination of colicin M and colicin E7 demonstrated strong antibacterial effects, reducing pathogen levels significantly, thus offering a potential new method for controlling E. coli in food products that could be approved as safe for consumption.

Article Abstract

Enterohemorrhagic Escherichia coli (EHEC) is one of the leading causes of bacterial enteric infections worldwide, causing ∼100,000 illnesses, 3,000 hospitalizations, and 90 deaths annually in the United States alone. These illnesses have been linked to consumption of contaminated animal products and vegetables. Currently, other than thermal inactivation, there are no effective methods to eliminate pathogenic bacteria in food. Colicins are nonantibiotic antimicrobial proteins, produced by E. coli strains that kill or inhibit the growth of other E. coli strains. Several colicins are highly effective against key EHEC strains. Here we demonstrate very high levels of colicin expression (up to 3 g/kg of fresh biomass) in tobacco and edible plants (spinach and leafy beets) at costs that will allow commercialization. Among the colicins examined, plant-expressed colicin M had the broadest antimicrobial activity against EHEC and complemented the potency of other colicins. A mixture of colicin M and colicin E7 showed very high activity against all major EHEC strains, as defined by the US Department of Agriculture/Food and Drug Administration. Treatments with low (less than 10 mg colicins per L) concentrations reduced the pathogenic bacterial load in broth culture by 2 to over 6 logs depending on the strain. In experiments using meats spiked with E. coli O157:H7, colicins efficiently reduced the population of the pathogen by at least 2 logs. Plant-produced colicins could be effectively used for the broad control of pathogenic E. coli in both plant- and animal-based food products and, in the United States, colicins could be approved using the generally recognized as safe (GRAS) regulatory approval pathway.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4603501PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1513311112DOI Listing

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