The attachment to fully characterized primary rumen epithelial cell cultures of Escherichia coli strains isolated from different animal species and expressing F1-F4 or F17 fimbriae was examined. As the cell cultures contained stratified (keratinized) and non-stratified (non-keratinized) cells which grew either confluently or non-confluently, the strength of attachment of the different bacterial strains was assessed in relation to the differentiation state of the cells. Thus, strains having F1 fimbriae attached to all types of cultured cells, while strains with F2 and F3 fimbriae did not bind at all. E. coli strains having F4 or F17 fimbriae attached only to non-keratinized cells, particularly to confluent areas. As membrane glycosylation is known to change with differentiation (keratinization), our results suggest that the attachment of fimbriated E. coli strains which were capable of binding to rumen cells was more likely to be dependent on differentiation than the host specificity of the bacteria.

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