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Revista Peruana de Medicina Experimental y Salud Pública | 2011

Frecuencia y patotipos de Escherichia coli diarrogénica en niños peruanos con y sin diarrea

Theresa J. Ochoa; Erik Mercado; David Durand; Fulton P. Rivera; Susan Mosquito; Carmen Contreras; Maribel Riveros; Angela Lluque; Francesca Barletta; Ana Prada; Joaquim Ruiz

UNLABELLED INTRODUCTION; Diarrheagenic E. coli (DEC) are a major cause of diarrhea in children in developing countries. However, they are not part of routine diagnosis in clinical laboratories. OBJECTIVES To determine the DEC prevalence in Peruvian children and to describe the genetic variability of these strains. MATERIALS AND METHODS A total of 8 003 E. coli strains previously isolated from eight different studies of diarrhea in children, mainly from peri-urban areas of Lima, were analyzed. Diagnosis of DEC was done with Multiplex real-time PCR using genes for each of the 6 DEC groups. Conventional PCR was performed for the detection of additional virulence genes. RESULTS Globally, the mean prevalence in diarrhea samples (n=4,243) was: enteroaggregative E. coli (EAEC) 9.9%, enteropathogenic E. coli (EPEC) 8.5%, enterotoxigenic E. coli (ETEC) 6.9%, diffusely adherent E. coli (DAEC) 4.8%, Shiga toxin-producing E. coli (STEC) 0.8% and enteroinvasive E. coli (EIEC) 0.6%. The relative frequency of each pathogen varies according to the age and the type of study. The main pathotypes in control samples (n=3,760) were EPEC (10.9%) and EAEC (10.4%). An important variability in the virulence genes frequency and molecular resistance mechanisms for each pathotype was found, without differences between diarrhea and control groups. CONCLUSIONS DEC are a major cause of diarrhea in Peruvian children. These pathogens are highly heterogeneous. Additional studies are required to determine the prevalence in rural areas of Peru and in severe diarrhea cases.


International Journal of Medical Microbiology | 2015

Virulence factors and mechanisms of antimicrobial resistance in Shigella strains from periurban areas of Lima (Peru)

Angela Lluque; Susan Mosquito; Cláudia Gomes; Maribel Riveros; David Durand; Drake H. Tilley; María Bernal; Ana Prada; Theresa J. Ochoa; Joaquim Ruiz

The study was aimed to describe the serotype, mechanisms of antimicrobial resistance, and virulence determinants in Shigella spp. isolated from Peruvian children. Eighty three Shigella spp. were serogrouped and serotyped being established the antibiotic susceptibility. The presence of 12 virulence factors (VF) and integrase 1 and 2, along with commonly found antibiotic resistance genes was established by PCR. S. flexneri was the most relevant serogroup (55 isolates, 66%), with serotype 2a most frequently detected (27 of 55, 49%), followed by S. boydii and S. sonnei at 12 isolates each (14%) and S. dysenteriae (four isolates, 5%). Fifty isolates (60%) were multi-drug resistant (MDR) including 100% of S. sonnei and 64% of S. flexneri. Resistance levels were high to trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole (86%), tetracycline (74%), ampicillin (67%), and chloramphenicol (65%). Six isolates showed decreased azithromycin susceptibility. No isolate was resistant to nalidixic acid, ciprofloxacin, nitrofurantoin, or ceftriaxone. The most frequent resistance genes were sul2 (95%), tet(B) (92%), cat (80%), dfrA1 (47%), blaOXA-1like (40%), with intl1 and intl2 detected in 51 and 52% of the isolates, respectively. Thirty-one different VF profiles were observed, being the ipaH (100%), sen (77%), virA and icsA (75%) genes the most frequently found. Differences in the prevalence of VF were observed between species with S. flexneri isolates, particularly serotype 2a, possessing high numbers of VF. In conclusion, this study highlights the high heterogeneity of Shigella VF and resistance genes, and prevalence of MDR organisms within this geographic region.


Revista Peruana de Medicina Experimental y Salud Pública | 2012

Niveles de resistencia a quinolonas y otros antimicrobianos en cepas de Escherichia coli comensales en niños de la zona periurbana de Lima, Perú

Maria J. Pons; Susan Mosquito; Theresa J. Ochoa; Martha Vargas; Margarita Molina; Angela Lluque; Ana I. Gil; Lucie Ecker; Francesca Barletta; Claudio F. Lanata; Luis J. del Valle; Joaquim Ruiz

El objetivo principal del estudio fue establecer el nivel de resistencia a antimicrobianos en un total de 222 cepas comensales de E. coli de origen fecal, en Peru. Las frecuencias de resistencia encontrados, frente los antimicrobianos evaluados, fueron: ampicilina (62,6%), cotrimoxazol (48,6%), tetraciclina (43,0%) y cloranfenicol (15,8%). Destacan los elevados niveles de resistencia a quinolonas: 32% al acido nalidixico (NAL) y 12% a ciprofloxacino (CIP). Estos elevados niveles hacia las quinolonas en cepas comensales aisladas en ninos de esta franja de edad, realzan el uso extendido y el impacto de consumo de este tipo de antimicrobianos en la comunidad, mostrando el riesgo potencial de su perdida de utilidad en el area.


The Scientific World Journal | 2015

Diarrheagenic Escherichia coli phylogroups are associated with antibiotic resistance and duration of diarrheal episode.

Susan Mosquito; Maria J. Pons; Maribel Riveros; Joaquim Ruiz; Theresa J. Ochoa

Conventionally, in Escherichia coli, phylogenetic groups A and B1 are associated with commensal strains while B2 and D are associated with extraintestinal strains. The aim of this study was to evaluate diarrheagenic (DEC) and commensal E. coli phylogeny and its association with antibiotic resistance and clinical characteristics of the diarrheal episode. Phylogenetic groups and antibiotic resistance of 369 E. coli strains (commensal strains and DEC from children with or without diarrhea) isolated from Peruvian children <1 year of age were determined by a Clermont triplex PCR and Kirby-Bauer method, respectively. The distribution of the 369 E. coli strains among the 4 phylogenetic groups was A (40%), D (31%), B1 (21%), and B2 (8%). DEC-control strains were more associated with group A while DEC-diarrhea strains were more associated with group D (P < 0.05). There was a tendency (P = 0.06) for higher proportion of persistent diarrhea (≥14 days) among severe groups (B2 and D) in comparison with nonsevere groups (A and B1). Strains belonging to group D presented significantly higher percentages of multidrug resistance than the rest of the groups (P > 0.01). In summary, DEC-diarrhea strains were more associated with group D than strains from healthy controls.


Microbial Drug Resistance | 2013

In Vitro Development and Analysis of Escherichia coli and Shigella boydii Azithromycin–Resistant Mutants

Cláudia Gomes; Maria J. Pons; Ariel Magallon-Tejada; David Durand; Angela Lluque; Susan Mosquito; Maribel Riveros; Erik Mercado; Ana Prada; Theresa J. Ochoa; Joaquim Ruiz

The aim of this study was to develop and analyze in vitro azithromycin (AZM)-resistant mutants of Escherichia coli and Shigella boydii. Three clinical isolates of E. coli and one S. boydii isolated from feces samples collected from children under 5 years of age with diarrhea in Lima, Peru were inoculated onto Mueller-Hinton plates containing increasing serial dilutions of AZM ranging from their specific minimal inhibitory concentration (2 or 4 mg/l) to 64 mg/l. From these plates, 16 AZM-resistant mutants were selected to determine the stability of the resistance and the presence of cross resistance with other antibiotics. The role of Phe-Arg-β-Naphthylamide (PAβN)-inhibitible efflux pumps as well as the presence of mutations in the rplV, rplD, and rrlH (23S rRNA) genes and alterations in the outer membrane profiles were determined in these 16 mutants. The rate of mutation ranged from < 2.70×10(-10) to 2.17×10(-7) for E. coli and from < 9.58×10(-10) to 1.05×10(-8) for S. boydii. E. coli mutants showed an increase in the AZM-MIC up to sixfold with one strain achieving a MIC >256 mg/l. In contrast, S. boydii only presented increases of up to twofold in MIC levels. All the strains obtained, but one showed stable AZM resistance. In the presence of PAβN, the AZM MICs decreased to parental levels in Shigella mutants, while no MIC returned to parental levels among the E. coli mutants. No cross resistance to other classes of antibiotics was found. These results show the relevance of PAβN-inhibitible efflux pumps in the basal levels and development of AZM resistance. Further studies to characterize the remaining unidentified mechanisms of AZM resistance are needed.


Revista Peruana de Medicina Experimental y Salud Pública | 2014

Mecanismos moleculares de resistencia antibiótica en Escherichia coli asociadas a diarrea

Susan Mosquito; Joaquim Ruiz; José Bauer; Theresa J. Ochoa

Antibiotic resistance is an emerging problem worldwide present in many bacteria, specially in Escherichia coli, which has high percentages of resistance to ampicilline, thrimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole, tetracycline, chloramphenicol and nalidixic acid, which implies important complications in antibiotic treatment when required. The increasing antibiotic resistance is due to the acquisition of different molecular mechanisms of resistance through point chromosomal mutations and /or horizontal transfer of genetic material between related or different species facilitated by some genetic elements such as integrons. This review discusses the effects of the most common molecular mechanisms of antibiotic resistance in E. coli: enzymatic inactivation, changes in the target site and permeability disturbances. Getting to know the mechanisms of resistance which are involved, as the World Health Organization recommends, will allow us to improve the surveillance of the antibiotic resistance, the control policies and the antibiotic utilization at a national level.


Fems Immunology and Medical Microbiology | 2016

pic gene of enteroaggregative Escherichia coli and its association with diarrhea in Peruvian children

David Durand; Carmen A. Contreras; Susan Mosquito; Joaquim Ruiz; Thomas G. Cleary; Theresa J. Ochoa

Enteroaggregative Escherichia coli (EAEC) causes acute and persistent diarrhea among children, HIV-infected patients, and travelers to developing countries. We have searched for 18 genes-encoding virulence factors associated with aggregative adherence, dispersion, biofilm, toxins, serine protease autotransporters of Enterobacteriaceae (SPATEs) and siderophores, analyzed in 172 well-characterized EAEC strains (aggR(+)) isolated from stool samples of 97 children with diarrhea and 75 healthy controls from a passive surveillance diarrhea cohort study in Peru. Eighty-one different genetic profiles were identified, 37 were found only associated with diarrhea and 25 with control samples. The most frequent genetic profile was aggC(+)aatA(+)aap(+)shf(+)fyuA(+), present in 19 strains, including diarrhea and controls. The profile set1A(+)set1B(+)pic(+) was associated with diarrhea (P < 0.05). Of all genes evaluated, the most frequent were aatA (CVD 342) present in 159 strains (92.4%) and fyuA in 157 (91.3%). When EAEC strains were analyzed as a single pathogen (excluding co-infections), only pic was associated with diarrhea (P < 0.05) and with prolonged diarrhea (diarrhea ≥ 7 days) (P < 0.05). In summary, this is the first report on the prevalence of a large set of EAEC virulence genes and its association with diarrhea in Peruvian children. More studies are needed to elucidate the exact role of each virulence factor.


International Journal of Antimicrobial Agents | 2013

Which mechanisms of azithromycin resistance are selected when efflux pumps are inhibited

Cláudia Gomes; Sandra Martínez-Puchol; David Durand; Angela Lluque; Susan Mosquito; Theresa J. Ochoa; Joaquim Ruiz

The aim of this study was to develop in vitro azithromycin (AZM)-resistant mutants of Escherichia coli and Shigella spp. in the presence of Phe-Arg β-naphthylamide (PAβN) and to observe which AZM resistance mechanisms other than efflux pumps were inhibited by PAβN emerge. The frequency of mutation ranged between <6.32 × 10(-10) and 5.22 × 10(-7) for E. coli and between <5.32 × 10(-10) and 1.69 × 10(-7) for Shigella spp. The E. coli mutants showed an increase in the AZM minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) up to 128-fold, whilst the Shigella spp. mutants presented increases in MIC levels of up to 8-fold. In one mutant, the insertion of nucleotides encoding the amino acid sequence IMPRAS was found in the rplV gene. Increases in OmpW expression were observed in all E. coli mutants compared with their respective parental isolates. The combination of antibiotics and efflux pump inhibitors appears to be a good option to reduce the frequency of mutation in clinical isolates.


Biochemistry and Cell Biology | 2012

Effect of bovine lactoferrin on the minimum inhibitory concentrations of ampicillin and trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole for clinical Shigella spp. strains

Susan Mosquito; Gianina Zegarra; Claudia Villanueva; Joaquín Ruiz; Theresa J. Ochoa

Here, we determined the effect of bovine lactoferrin (bLF) on the minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) of ampicillin and trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole in Shigella . Using a microdilution method, the MIC was determined in the presence or absence of bovine lactoferrin (10 mg/mL) on 88 Shigella strains (56 Shigella flexneri , 15 Shigella boydii , 13 Shigella sonnei , and 4 Shigella dysenteriae ) previously isolated from peruvian children <2 years old. A fold change of 2 or more in MIC values was considered significant. For ampicillin, 67 (76%) strains were highly resistant; one-third of the strains (32%) showed a decrease in ampicillin MIC in the presence of LF. This was more typical of MIC values in less resistant strains. For 7 (8%) ampicillin-resistant strains, the decrease in the MIC resulted in the strains reaching the cutoff for susceptible in the presence of bLF. For trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole, 93% of the isolates (n = 82) were highly resistant and only 4 isolates (5%) decreased their MIC in the presence of bLF. None of the trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole resistant strains became susceptible in the presence of LF. The decrease in the MIC in the presence of bLF seems to depend on the mechanisms of action of each antibiotic. In vivo studies are needed to further evaluate bLF as a coadjuvant to antibiotic treatment of resistant Shigella.


Revista Peruana de Medicina Experimental y Salud Pública | 2011

PATRONES DE ADHERENCIA DE CEPAS DE Escherichia coli DIFUSAMENTE ADHERENTE (DAEC) PROVENIENTES DE NIÑOS CON Y SIN DIARREA

Maribel Riveros; Francesca Barletta; Martin Cabello; David Durand; Erik Mercado; Carmen Contreras; Fulton P. Rivera; Susan Mosquito; Angela Lluque; Theresa J. Ochoa

RESUMEN Introduccion. Las E. coli de adherencia difusa (DAEC) son el sexto grupo de E. coli diarrogenicas reconocidas. Su asociacion con diarrea es controversial. No se conoce la variabilidad en los patrones de adherencia de cepas clinicas. Objetivos. Comparar los patrones de adherencia entre cepas aisladas de ninos con y sin diarrea. Materiales y metodos. Se analizo 31 cepas DAEC, 25 de diarrea y 6 de ninos asintomaticos (control) aislados de un estudio de cohorte de ninos menores de 12 meses en el cono sur de Lima. Las DAEC fueron identificadas por PCR (gen daaD). Se evaluo el patron y grado de adherencia en cultivos de celulas HEp-2; la polimerizacion de actina se evaluo por la prueba de coloracion de fluorescencia de actina (f AS); y la motilidad se evaluo por metodos convencionales microbiologicos. Resultados. El patron de adherencia difusa se encontro en el 88% de muestras de diarrea y en el 100% de muestras control. La cantidad de bacterias adheridas por celula fue significativamente menor en las muestras de diarrea (p<0,05). Sin embargo, la polimerizacion de actina fue mayor en las muestras de diarrea (60% frente a 17%). La prueba de motilidad fue positiva en el 60% de las cepas de diarrea y en el total de muestras control. Conclusiones. Nuestros hallazgos sugieren la existencia de diferencia en los patrones de adherencia, polimerizacion de actina y motilidad entre cepas de DAEC correspondientes a los grupos de diarrea y control. La significancia de estos resultados debe confirmarse con mayor numero de cepas, asi como la determinacion de los genes de virulencia en las cepas. Palabras clave: Escherichia coli de Adherencia Difusa; Diarrea; Nino; Adhesion Bacteriana; (fuente: DeCS BIREME).

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Theresa J. Ochoa

Cayetano Heredia University

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Joaquim Ruiz

University of Barcelona

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David Durand

Instituto de Medicina Tropical Alexander von Humboldt

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Angela Lluque

Cayetano Heredia University

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Maribel Riveros

Cayetano Heredia University

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Francesca Barletta

Cayetano Heredia University

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Erik Mercado

Cayetano Heredia University

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Ana Prada

Cayetano Heredia University

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