“…A variety of virulence factors has been investigated to understand these extraintestinal diseases in avian species, including adhesins (F1-fimbriae, P-fimbriae, and F17-fimbriae, curli fibres, and afimbrial adhesins), haemolysins (haemolysin A/E and a temperature-sensitive haemagglutinin), iron-acquisition systems (aerobactin and yersiniabactin), antibactericidal factors (invasion of brain endothelium protein A, outer membrane protein A, protein for increased serum survival), and toxins (Shiga toxin 1 and 2, heat stable toxin, and flagella toxin) (Hacker et al, 1983;Louie et al, 1994;Kaper et al, 1997;Ludwig et al, 1999;Nagy et al, 2002;Parreira & Gyles, 2002;Ewers et al, 2004;Schubert et al, 2004;Germon et al, 2005;Beloin et al, 2006;Capitani et al, 2006;Belogurov et al, 2009). According to recent studies, many virulence genes associated with APEC are located on large plasmids, the importance of those large plasmids has been demonstrated by the plasmid-encoded genes shared among APEC strains (Dozois et al, 2003;Johnson et al, 2008;Tivendale et al, 2009).…”