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Distinguishing Pathovars from Nonpathovars: Escherichia coli. | LitMetric

Distinguishing Pathovars from Nonpathovars: Escherichia coli.

Microbiol Spectr

Division of Infectious Diseases and Vaccinology, School of Public Health, University of California, Berkeley, CA 94720.

Published: December 2020

AI Article Synopsis

  • - The text discusses a versatile bacterium that causes various human infections, distinguishing between intestinal pathogenic variants (IPEC) that often lead to gastrointestinal illnesses and extraintestinal pathogenic variants (ExPEC) that cause infections like UTIs and sepsis.
  • - It highlights that while IPEC can be identified by specific virulence factors, ExPEC are harder to differentiate from non-pathogenic strains, raising questions about their origins and classification.
  • - Advances in whole genome sequencing have complicated our understanding of these bacteria's taxonomy, prompting the use of molecular epidemiology to gain insights into their infections and transmission.

Article Abstract

is one of the most well-adapted and pathogenically versatile bacterial organisms. It causes a variety of human infections, including gastrointestinal illnesses and extraintestinal infections. It is also part of the intestinal commensal flora of humans and other mammals. Groups of that cause diarrhea are often described as intestinal pathogenic (IPEC), while those that cause infections outside of the gut are called extraintestinal pathogenic (ExPEC). IPEC can cause a variety of diarrheal illnesses as well as extraintestinal syndromes such as hemolytic-uremic syndrome. ExPEC cause urinary tract infections, bloodstream infection, sepsis, and neonatal meningitis. IPEC and ExPEC have thus come to be referred to as pathogenic variants of or pathovars. While IPEC can be distinguished from commensal based on their characteristic virulence factors responsible for their associated clinical manifestations, ExPEC cannot be so easily distinguished. IPEC most likely have reservoirs outside of the human intestine but it is unclear if ExPEC represent nothing more than commensal that breach a sterile barrier to cause extraintestinal infections. This question has become more complicated by the advent of whole genome sequencing (WGS) that has raised a new question about the taxonomic characterization of based on traditional clinical microbiologic and phylogenetic methods. This review discusses how molecular epidemiologic approaches have been used to address these questions, and how answers to these questions may contribute to our better understanding of the epidemiology of infections caused by . *This article is part of a curated collection.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10773148PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/microbiolspec.AME-0014-2020DOI Listing

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