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A comparison of serotyping, BRENDA-typing and incompatibility grouping, and toxin testing of haemolytic Escherichia coli isolated from piglets before and after weaning
Authors: Hampson DJ, Winter PJ, Wilson MW, Marshall RB, Bettelheim KAPublication: New Zealand Veterinary Journal, Volume 34, Issue 7, pp 101-103, Jul 1986
Publisher: Taylor and Francis
Animal type: Livestock, Pig, Production animal
Subject Terms: Bacterial, Clinical pathology, Diagnostic procedures, Infectious disease, Disease/defect, DNA/RNA, Growth/development, Zoonosis, Public health
Article class: Scientific Article
Abstract: Before weaning, some young pigs in a research piggery excreted in their faeces a weakly haemolytic nonenterotoxigenic serotype of Escherichia Coli. After weaning, all of the pigs excreted strongly haemolytic Escheridzia coli of known enteropathogenic serotypes (0-l38 and 0-139). The 0-138 serotype produced vero cell toxin, whilst the 0-139 serotype elaborated heat labile enterotoxin. Haemolytic enterotoxigenic E. Coli were also recovered from three-week-old unweaned piglets with so-called `milk scours` and from pigs with post-weaning diarrhoea on two local commercial piggeries. Selected haemolytic isolates were compared using serotyping, bacterial restriction endonuclease DNA analysis (BRENDA) and incompatibility grouping. The three typing methods divided most of the isolates into the same groupings; the exceptions were two isolates with the same BRENDA pattern and incompatibility group, but with different Hserotypes, and eleven isolates with the same serotype and BRENDA pattern but which showed differences in colony compatibility such that they were divided into five subgroups of a single incompatibility type.
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