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1.
Epidemiol Infect ; 120(1): 17-20, 1998 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9528813

ABSTRACT

A 16-month old female child living on an Ontario dairy farm was taken to hospital suffering from bloody diarrhoea. Escherichia coli O157:H7 was isolated from her stool. Initial tests of well water samples were negative for E. coli by standard methods but culture of selected coliform colonies on sorbitol-MacConkey agar led to isolation of E. coli O157:H7. E. coli O157:H7 was also isolated from 63% of cattle on the farm. The E. coli O157:H7 isolates from the child, the water and the cattle were phage type 14, produced verotoxins 1 and 2, and were highly related on analysis by pulsed field gel electrophoresis. The child did not have known direct contact with the cattle and did not consume unpasteurized milk. Hydrogeological investigation revealed the design and location of the well would allow manure-contaminated surface water to flow into the well. This investigation demonstrates that cattle farm well water is a potential source of E. coli O157:H7 which may not be identified by standard screening for E. coli in water.


Subject(s)
Cattle Diseases/etiology , Escherichia coli Infections/etiology , Escherichia coli Infections/veterinary , Escherichia coli O157/classification , Fresh Water/microbiology , Manure/microbiology , Water Supply , Agriculture , Animals , Bacteriophage Typing , Cattle , Cattle Diseases/transmission , Escherichia coli Infections/transmission , Female , Humans , Infant , Ontario
2.
J Am Vet Med Assoc ; 195(3): 331-4, 1989 Aug 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2548985

ABSTRACT

A retrospective analysis of the medical records of 30 consecutive cases of diarrhea occurring in dogs that were hospitalized in a teaching hospital was performed. A prospective analysis of culture results for Clostridium perfringens of dogs with diarrhea were compared with those of a control nondiarrheal group. Hospital-acquired diarrhea in dogs was found to be associated with multiple serotypes of enterotoxigenic Clostridium perfringens. Other potential etiologic agents could not be isolated. Clinical signs were variable, and included mild depression, anorexia, and soft to watery diarrhea with or without frank blood, mucus, and tenesmus. Fever was not present. There were no hematologic or serum biochemical abnormalities, nor were there any consistent virologic or parasitologic findings. Salmonella spp or Campylobacter spp were not identified by fecal culture. No risk factors could be identified. A dog that was euthanatized on the day it developed diarrhea had intestinal histologic findings suggestive of clostridial enteritis. Dogs with diarrhea had significantly higher fecal clostridial counts than did dogs without diarrhea (mean log10 counts +/- SD = 6.34 +/- 1.79 vs 4.75 +/- 2.07). Enterotoxin was found in the feces of 41% of diarrheic dogs but in only 7% of dogs without diarrhea.


Subject(s)
Clostridium Infections/veterinary , Cross Infection/veterinary , Diarrhea/veterinary , Dog Diseases/microbiology , Animals , Clostridium Infections/epidemiology , Clostridium Infections/microbiology , Clostridium perfringens/isolation & purification , Clostridium perfringens/metabolism , Cross Infection/epidemiology , Cross Infection/microbiology , Diarrhea/epidemiology , Diarrhea/microbiology , Dog Diseases/epidemiology , Dogs , Enterotoxins/biosynthesis , Prospective Studies , Retrospective Studies
3.
Arch Biochem Biophys ; 255(2): 244-53, 1987 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-3592676

ABSTRACT

Phosphocellulose-purified tubulin has been shown to form a characteristic "ladder" of nonmicrotubular aggregates during nondenaturing gel electrophoresis (J. J. Correia and R. C. Williams, Jr. (1985) Arch. Biochem. Biophys. 239, 120-129). In this paper we describe evidence that the intersubunit bonds responsible for formation of these oligomeric particles are disulfides. Two-dimensional nondenaturing-denaturing gel electrophoresis demonstrates that each aggregate zone is composed of alpha- and beta-subunits of tubulin. Omission of beta-mercaptoethanol during the sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS)-electrophoresis step causes a pattern of aggregates to appear and implicates disulfide linkages in their stabilization. Molecular weights, estimated from mobilities in the second (SDS) dimension of two-dimensional gels, suggest that the aggregates are crosslinked in units of monomers, not heterodimers. Consistent with this conclusion, alpha- or beta-subunits alone (isolated by isoelectric focusing) will form the same ladder of aggregates. The disulfide crosslinking of tubulin is also achievable in solution. It is favored by high concentrations of alcohol, the presence of oxidizing agents, high pH, and high temperature, conditions that denature tubulin and cause rapid noncovalent aggregation or precipitation. When aggregate formation was monitored as a function of time by SDS-gel electrophoresis in the absence of beta-mercaptoethanol and by quantitative sulfhydryl and disulfide titrations, the most effective conditions for the crosslinking reaction included greater than 75% alcohol, excess H2O2, or excess iodine. These results suggest that proximity of a hydrophobic gel matrix, high pH, the presence of oxidizing agents, high protein concentration, tubulin's propensity to aggregate nonspecifically, and the availability of as many as 20 sulfhydryls in alpha beta-tubulin contribute, during nondenaturing gel electrophoresis, to the spontaneous formation of disulfide-crosslinked tubulin aggregates.


Subject(s)
Tubulin/metabolism , Chromatography, Ion Exchange , Disulfides/analysis , Electrophoresis, Polyacrylamide Gel , Isoelectric Focusing , Macromolecular Substances , Mercaptoethanol/pharmacology , Molecular Weight , Tubulin/isolation & purification
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