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Dive into the research topics where Adrian L. Cookson is active.

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Featured researches published by Adrian L. Cookson.


International Journal of Medical Microbiology | 2002

The role of type 1 and curli fimbriae of Shiga toxin-producing Escherichia coli in adherence to abiotic surfaces

Adrian L. Cookson; W. A. Cooley; Martin J. Woodward

Biofilm formation on abiotic surfaces may provide a source of microbial contamination and may also enhance microbial environmental survival. The role of fimbrial expression by Shiga toxin-producing Escherichia coli (STEC) in biofilm formation is poorly understood. This study aimed to investigate the role of STEC type 1 and curli fimbriae in adhesion to and biofilm formation on abiotic surfaces. None of 13 O157:H7 isolates expressed either fimbrial type whereas 11 of 13 and 5 of 13 non-O157 STEC elaborated type 1 fimbriae and curli fimbriae, respectively. Mutants made by allelic exchange of a diarrhoeal non-O157 STEC isolate, O128:H2 (E41509), unable to elaborate type 1 and curli fimbriae were made for adherence and biofilm assays. Elaboration of type 1 fimbriae was necessary for the adhesion to abiotic surfaces whereas curliation was associated with both adherence and subsequent biofilm formation. STEC O157:H7 adhered to thermanox and glass but poorly to polystyrene. Additionally, STEC O157:H7 failed to form biofilms. These data indicate that certain STEC isolates are able to form biofilms and that the elaboration of curli fimbriae may enhance biofilm formation leading to possible long-term survival and a potential source of human infection.


Veterinary Record | 1999

Attaching and effacing lesions in the large intestine of an eight-month-old heifer associated with Escherichia coli O26 infection in a group of animals with dysentery.

G. R. Pearson; K. J. Bazeley; J. R. Jones; Rf Gunning; Martin J. Green; Adrian L. Cookson; Martin J. Woodward

Escherichia coli O26:K60, with genetic attributes consistent with a potentially human enterohaemorrhagic E coli was isolated from the faeces of an eight-month-old heifer with dysentery. Attaching and effacing lesions were identified in the colon of a similarly affected heifer examined postmortem, and shown to be associated with E coil 026 by specific immunolabelling.


Journal of Medical Microbiology | 2001

Attaching and effacing lesions caused by Escherichia coli O157:H7 in experimentally inoculated neonatal lambs

Andrew Wales; G. R. Pearson; Andrew M. Skuse; John M. Roe; Christine M. Hayes; Adrian L. Cookson; Martin J. Woodward

Four 6-day-old conventionally reared lambs were inoculated orally with a total of 10(9) cfu comprising equal numbers of four enterohaemorrhagic Escherichia coli (EHEC) O157:H7 strains. All animals remained clinically normal. Tissues were sampled under terminal anaesthesia at 12, 36, 60 and 84 h post inoculation (hpi). EHEC O157:H7 was cultured from most gastrointestinal tract sites. Small, sparse attaching and effacing (AE) lesions were found in the caecum at 12 and 36 hpi and in the terminal colon and rectum at 84 hpi. Organisms in the lesions were labelled specifically by an O157 antiserum. The results indicate that the well-characterised mechanisms for intimate attachment encoded by the locus for enterocyte effacement (LEE) of EHEC O157:H7 may contribute to the initial events, at least, of colonisation of sheep.


International Journal of Medical Microbiology | 2003

The role of intimin in the adherence of enterohaemorrhagic Escherichia coli (EHEC) O157:H7 to HEp-2 tissue culture cells and to bovine gut explant tissues

Adrian L. Cookson; Martin J. Woodward

Intimin, an outer membrane protein encoded by eaeA, is a key determinant for the formation of attaching and effacing (AE) lesions by enterohaemorrhagic Escherichia coli (EHEC). To investigate the role of intimin in adherence, the eaeA gene was insertionally inactivated in three EHEC O157:H7 strains of diverse origin. The absence or presence of intimin did not correlate with the extent of adhesion of mutant or wild-type O157:H7 in tissue culture and neonatal calf gut tissue explant adherence assays. Adherence of the eaeA mutants to HEp-2 cells was diffuse with no evidence of intimate attachment whereas wild-type bacteria formed microcolonies and AE lesions. Intimin-independent adherence to neonatal calf gut explants was demonstrated by eaeA mutants and wild-type strains which adhered in the greatest numbers to colon but least well to rumen tissue. These results confirm that intimin is necessary for intimate attachment and that additional adherence factors are involved in intimin-independent adherence.


Journal of Medical Microbiology | 2002

Variation in the persistence of Escherichia coli O157:H7 in experimentally inoculated 6-week-old conventional lambs

Adrian L. Cookson; Andrew Wales; John M. Roe; Christine M. Hayes; G. R. Pearson; Martin J. Woodward

Six-week-old lambs were inoculated orally with 10(9) cfu of an antibiotic-resistance marked four-strain mixture of enterohaemorrhagic Escherichia coli (EHEC) O157:H7 to investigate faecal excretion and intestinal colonisation. In the first experiment, three E. coli O157:H7 isolates were not detected in the faeces of any lambs beyond day 8 post inoculation (pi), or from any of the tissues derived from inoculated animals. One strain, 140065 Nal(r), was isolated from the caecum and colon of one lamb on day 9 pi, from the rectum of another on day 22 pi and persisted in the faeces for up to 28 days pi. All animals remained clinically normal throughout the study period and histological evidence of adhesion of E. coli O157:H7 to the intestinal mucosa was not found. In a separate experiment, four 6-week-old lambs were inoculated orally with 10(9) cfu of E. coli O157:H7 strain 140065 Nal(r) alone. Faecal samples were positive for this strain until the end of the experiment (day 19 pi). This strain was also recovered from the gastrointestinal tract of lambs on days 6, 18 and 19 pi, but was not isolated at day 17 pi. When sampled separately, rectum and terminal colon contents contained higher numbers of the inoculated strain than the intestinal tissue at these sites. Animals inoculated with O157:H7 strain 140065 Nal(r) alone produced soft faeces from day 5 pi onwards. Although attaching and effacing lesions were observed in the caecum, proximal colon and rectum in one animal on day 18 pi, the adherent bacteria did not stain with antiserum raised against the O157 antigen.


Journal of Medical Microbiology | 2002

Isolation from a sheep of an attaching and effacing Escherichia coli O115 : H- with a novel combination of virulence factors

Adrian L. Cookson; Christine M. Hayes; G. R. Pearson; John M. Roe; Andrew Wales; Martin J. Woodward

Attaching and effacing (AE) lesions were observed in the caecum, proximal colon and rectum of one of four lambs experimentally inoculated at 6 weeks of age with Escherichia coli O157:H7. However, the attached bacteria did not immunostain with O157-specific antiserum. Subsequent bacteriological analysis of samples from this animal yielded two E. coli O115:H(-) strains, one from the colon (CO) and one from the rectum (RC), and those bacteria forming the AE lesions were shown to be of the O115 serogroup by immunostaining. The O115:H(-)isolates formed microcolonies and attaching and effacing lesions, as demonstrated by the fluorescence actin staining test, on HEp-2 tissue culture cells. Both isolates were confirmed by PCR to encode the epsilon (epsilon) subtype of intimin. Supernates of both O115:H(-) isolates induced cytopathic effects on Vero cell monolayers, and PCR analysis verified that both isolates encoded EAST1, CNF1 and CNF2 toxins but not Shiga-like toxins. Both isolates harboured similar sized plasmids but PCR analysis indicated that only one of the O115:H(-) isolates (CO) possessed the plasmid-associated virulence determinants ehxA and etpD. Neither strain possessed the espP, katP or bfpA plasmid-associated virulence determinants. These E. coli O115:H(-) strains exhibited a novel combination of virulence determinants and are the first isolates found to possess both CNF1 and CNF2.


Journal of Medical Microbiology | 2002

Production of attaching-effacing lesions in ligated large intestine loops of 6-month-old sheep by Escherichia coli O157:H7

Andrew Wales; F. A. Clifton-Hadley; Adrian L. Cookson; Michael Dibb-Fuller; Roberto M. Laragione; G. R. Pearson; Martin J. Woodward

Shiga-toxigenic Escherichia coli O157:H7 (STEC O157:H7) is associated with potentially fatal human disease, and a persistent reservoir of the organism is present in some farm animal species, especially cattle and sheep. The mechanisms of persistent colonisation of the ruminant intestine by STEC O157:H7 are poorly understood but may be associated with intimate adherence to eukaryotic cells. Intimate adherence, as evidenced by induction of attaching-effacing (AE) lesions by STEC O157, has been observed in 6-day-old conventional lambs after deliberate oral infection but not in older animals. Thus, the present study used a ligated intestinal loop technique to investigate whether STEC O157:H7 and other attaching-effacing E. coli may adhere intimately to the sheep large intestinal mucosa. To do this, four STEC O157:H7 strains, one STEC O26:K60:H11 and one Shiga toxin-negative E. coli O157:H7 strain, suspended in either phosphate-buffered saline or Dulbeccos modified Eagles medium, were inoculated into ligated spiral colon loops of each of two lambs. The loops were removed 6 h after inoculation, fixed and examined by light and electron microscopy. AE lesions on the intestinal mucosa were produced by all the inoculated strains. However, the lesions were sparse and small, typically comprising bacterial cells intimately adhered to a single enterocyte, or a few adjacent enterocytes. There was little correlation between the extent of intimate adherence in this model and the bacterial cell density, pre-inoculation growth conditions of the bacteria or the strain tested.


Veterinary Record | 2001

Experimental infection of six-month-old sheep with Escherichia coli O157:H7

A. D. Wales; F. A. Clifton-Hadley; Adrian L. Cookson; Michael Dibb-Fuller; R. M. La Ragione; Katherine A. Sprigings; G. R. Pearson; Martin J. Woodward

ENTEROHAEMORRHAGIC Escherichia coli (EHEC) serotype 0157:H7 infection in humans is potentially fatal in the very young and the elderly, and major incidents worldwide have been well documented (Smith and Scotland 1993, Boyce and others 1995, Swinbanks 1996). A distinctive gastrointestinal illness of severe blood diarrhoea (haemorrhagic colitis) typically without fever (Riley and others 1983), may be followed by acute renal failure, thrombocytopenia and microangiopathic haemolytic anaemia (haemorrhagic uraemic syndrome) (Karmali and others 1983). Molecular pathogenesis studies have demonstrated roles in the disease process for toxins, an enterohaemolysin, the intimin adherence factor and possibly the pO157 plasmid and lipopolysaccharide (Nataro and Kaper 1998). EHEC 0157:H7 is present in the faecal flora of cattle and sheep (Griffin and Tauxe 1991). Cattle may be readily infected both naturally and experimentally, exhibiting mild transient diarrhoea in calves and an asymptomatic transient carrier status in older animals (Cray and Moon 1995, Brown and others 1997, Woodward and others 1999, Wray and oth-


Veterinary Record | 2001

Attaching and effacing lesions in the intestines of two calves associated with natural infection with Escherichia coli O26:H11.

R. E Gunning; A. D. Wales; G. R. Pearson; E. Done; Adrian L. Cookson; Martin J. Woodward


International Journal of Medical Microbiology | 2002

The role of type 1 and curli fimbriae of Shiga toxin-producing in adherence to abiotic surfaces

Adrian L. Cookson

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Andrew Wales

Veterinary Laboratories Agency

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F. A. Clifton-Hadley

Veterinary Laboratories Agency

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Michael Dibb-Fuller

Veterinary Laboratories Agency

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A. Best

Veterinary Laboratories Agency

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