2009
DOI: 10.1099/mic.0.024190-0
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Characterization of sulphonamide-resistant Escherichia coli using comparison of sul2 gene sequences and multilocus sequence typing

Abstract: The sul2 gene encodes sulphonamide resistance (Sul R ) and is commonly found in Escherichia coli from different hosts. We typed E. coli isolates by multilocus sequence typing (MLST) and compared the results to sequence variation of sul2, in order to investigate the relation to host origin of pathogenic and commensal E. coli strains and to investigate whether transfer of sul2 into different genomic lineages has happened multiple times. Sixty-eight E. coli isolated in Denmark and Norway from different hosts and … Show more

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Cited by 37 publications
(30 citation statements)
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“…It also conflicts with the conventional understanding that the E. coli strains that cause diarrhea are distinct from those that cause extraintestinal disease, both phylogenetically and according to their discrete repertoires of syndrome-specific virulence genes (23). Regarding ST10 and EAEC, ST10 is known to be pathotypically heterogeneous (31), comprising EAEC, ETEC (31,50,54), ExPEC, and commensal E. coli (2,49). EAEC is a very common diarrheal pathotype, occurring in multiple lineages (31).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 68%
“…It also conflicts with the conventional understanding that the E. coli strains that cause diarrhea are distinct from those that cause extraintestinal disease, both phylogenetically and according to their discrete repertoires of syndrome-specific virulence genes (23). Regarding ST10 and EAEC, ST10 is known to be pathotypically heterogeneous (31), comprising EAEC, ETEC (31,50,54), ExPEC, and commensal E. coli (2,49). EAEC is a very common diarrheal pathotype, occurring in multiple lineages (31).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 68%
“…Finally, seven (1.5%) of the 463 E. coli isolates collected from diseased chickens in Spain between 2007 and 2009 were E. coli ST131, and two isolates produced CTX-M-9 and were susceptible to FQ (35). E. coli ST131 was also found in a pig in Denmark (198). In contrast, no ST131 isolates were identified by Wu et al among 39 clinical isolates of E. coli from cattle, sheep, chicken, and pigs (179).…”
Section: Animal-and Food-borne E Coli St131mentioning
confidence: 89%
“…The ST88 (CC23) phylogroup C clone was recently associated with the spread of different beta-lactamases in nosocomial E. coli isolates (33,34). Also, E. coli of the phylogenetic lineages A and C that belong to CC10 and CC23 frequently caused extraintestinal infections in humans, and together with CC155 isolates, they are often multiresistant (44)(45)(46). These results show that extraintestinal infections, especially in hospital patients, are frequently caused by E. coli variants with genetic backgrounds, such as phylogroups A, C, and B1, which are rather uncommon in ExPEC from communityacquired infections and which are often associated with multiple antibiotic resistances.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%