Investigation of prevalence of free Shiga toxin-producing Escherichia coli (STEC)-specific bacteriophages and its correlation with STEC bacterial hosts in a produce-growing area in Salinas, California.

Shiga toxin-producing E. coli (STEC) causes approximately 265,000 illnesses and 3,600 hospitalizations annually and is highly associated with animal contamination due to the natural reservoir of ruminant gastrointestinal tracts. Free STEC-specific bacteriophages against STEC strains are also commonl...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Yen-Te Liao, Irwin A Quintela, Kimberly Nguyen, Alexandra Salvador, Michael B Cooley, Vivian C H Wu
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2018-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5754052?pdf=render
id doaj-07155d8d6c6945e19e5453ef34eef933
record_format Article
spelling doaj-07155d8d6c6945e19e5453ef34eef9332020-11-25T01:22:52ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032018-01-01131e019053410.1371/journal.pone.0190534Investigation of prevalence of free Shiga toxin-producing Escherichia coli (STEC)-specific bacteriophages and its correlation with STEC bacterial hosts in a produce-growing area in Salinas, California.Yen-Te LiaoIrwin A QuintelaKimberly NguyenAlexandra SalvadorMichael B CooleyVivian C H WuShiga toxin-producing E. coli (STEC) causes approximately 265,000 illnesses and 3,600 hospitalizations annually and is highly associated with animal contamination due to the natural reservoir of ruminant gastrointestinal tracts. Free STEC-specific bacteriophages against STEC strains are also commonly isolated from fecal-contaminated environment. Previous studies have evaluated the correlation between the prevalence of STEC-specific bacteriophages and STEC strains to improve animal-associated environment. However, the similar information regarding free STEC-specific bacteriophages prevalence in produce growing area is lacking. Thus, the objectives of this research were to determine the prevalence of STEC-specific phages, analyze potential effects of environmental factors on the prevalence of the phages, and study correlations between STEC-specific bacteriophages and the bacterial hosts in pre-harvest produce environment. Surface water from 20 samples sites was subjected to free bacteriophage isolation using host strains of both generic E. coli and STEC (O157, six non-O157 and one O179 strains) cocktails, and isolation of O157 and non-O157 STEC strains by use of culture methods combined with PCR-based confirmation. The weather data were obtained from weather station website. Free O145- and O179-specific bacteriophages were the two most frequently isolated bacteriophages among all (O45, O145, O157 and O179) in this study. The results showed June and July had relatively high prevalence of overall STEC-specific bacteriophages with minimum isolation of STEC strains. In addition, the bacteriophages were likely isolated in the area-around or within city-with predominant human impact, whereas the STEC bacterial isolates were commonly found in agriculture impact environment. Furthermore, there was a trend that the sample sites with positive of free STEC bacteriophage did not have the specific STEC bacterial hosts. The findings of the study enable us to understand the ecology between free STEC-specific phages and STEC bacteria for further pre-harvest food safety management in produce environment.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5754052?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Yen-Te Liao
Irwin A Quintela
Kimberly Nguyen
Alexandra Salvador
Michael B Cooley
Vivian C H Wu
spellingShingle Yen-Te Liao
Irwin A Quintela
Kimberly Nguyen
Alexandra Salvador
Michael B Cooley
Vivian C H Wu
Investigation of prevalence of free Shiga toxin-producing Escherichia coli (STEC)-specific bacteriophages and its correlation with STEC bacterial hosts in a produce-growing area in Salinas, California.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Yen-Te Liao
Irwin A Quintela
Kimberly Nguyen
Alexandra Salvador
Michael B Cooley
Vivian C H Wu
author_sort Yen-Te Liao
title Investigation of prevalence of free Shiga toxin-producing Escherichia coli (STEC)-specific bacteriophages and its correlation with STEC bacterial hosts in a produce-growing area in Salinas, California.
title_short Investigation of prevalence of free Shiga toxin-producing Escherichia coli (STEC)-specific bacteriophages and its correlation with STEC bacterial hosts in a produce-growing area in Salinas, California.
title_full Investigation of prevalence of free Shiga toxin-producing Escherichia coli (STEC)-specific bacteriophages and its correlation with STEC bacterial hosts in a produce-growing area in Salinas, California.
title_fullStr Investigation of prevalence of free Shiga toxin-producing Escherichia coli (STEC)-specific bacteriophages and its correlation with STEC bacterial hosts in a produce-growing area in Salinas, California.
title_full_unstemmed Investigation of prevalence of free Shiga toxin-producing Escherichia coli (STEC)-specific bacteriophages and its correlation with STEC bacterial hosts in a produce-growing area in Salinas, California.
title_sort investigation of prevalence of free shiga toxin-producing escherichia coli (stec)-specific bacteriophages and its correlation with stec bacterial hosts in a produce-growing area in salinas, california.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2018-01-01
description Shiga toxin-producing E. coli (STEC) causes approximately 265,000 illnesses and 3,600 hospitalizations annually and is highly associated with animal contamination due to the natural reservoir of ruminant gastrointestinal tracts. Free STEC-specific bacteriophages against STEC strains are also commonly isolated from fecal-contaminated environment. Previous studies have evaluated the correlation between the prevalence of STEC-specific bacteriophages and STEC strains to improve animal-associated environment. However, the similar information regarding free STEC-specific bacteriophages prevalence in produce growing area is lacking. Thus, the objectives of this research were to determine the prevalence of STEC-specific phages, analyze potential effects of environmental factors on the prevalence of the phages, and study correlations between STEC-specific bacteriophages and the bacterial hosts in pre-harvest produce environment. Surface water from 20 samples sites was subjected to free bacteriophage isolation using host strains of both generic E. coli and STEC (O157, six non-O157 and one O179 strains) cocktails, and isolation of O157 and non-O157 STEC strains by use of culture methods combined with PCR-based confirmation. The weather data were obtained from weather station website. Free O145- and O179-specific bacteriophages were the two most frequently isolated bacteriophages among all (O45, O145, O157 and O179) in this study. The results showed June and July had relatively high prevalence of overall STEC-specific bacteriophages with minimum isolation of STEC strains. In addition, the bacteriophages were likely isolated in the area-around or within city-with predominant human impact, whereas the STEC bacterial isolates were commonly found in agriculture impact environment. Furthermore, there was a trend that the sample sites with positive of free STEC bacteriophage did not have the specific STEC bacterial hosts. The findings of the study enable us to understand the ecology between free STEC-specific phages and STEC bacteria for further pre-harvest food safety management in produce environment.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5754052?pdf=render
work_keys_str_mv AT yenteliao investigationofprevalenceoffreeshigatoxinproducingescherichiacolistecspecificbacteriophagesanditscorrelationwithstecbacterialhostsinaproducegrowingareainsalinascalifornia
AT irwinaquintela investigationofprevalenceoffreeshigatoxinproducingescherichiacolistecspecificbacteriophagesanditscorrelationwithstecbacterialhostsinaproducegrowingareainsalinascalifornia
AT kimberlynguyen investigationofprevalenceoffreeshigatoxinproducingescherichiacolistecspecificbacteriophagesanditscorrelationwithstecbacterialhostsinaproducegrowingareainsalinascalifornia
AT alexandrasalvador investigationofprevalenceoffreeshigatoxinproducingescherichiacolistecspecificbacteriophagesanditscorrelationwithstecbacterialhostsinaproducegrowingareainsalinascalifornia
AT michaelbcooley investigationofprevalenceoffreeshigatoxinproducingescherichiacolistecspecificbacteriophagesanditscorrelationwithstecbacterialhostsinaproducegrowingareainsalinascalifornia
AT vivianchwu investigationofprevalenceoffreeshigatoxinproducingescherichiacolistecspecificbacteriophagesanditscorrelationwithstecbacterialhostsinaproducegrowingareainsalinascalifornia
_version_ 1725125086598397952