Fecal carriage of Escherichia coli O157:H7 and carcass contamination in cattle at slaughter in northern Italy

  1. Silvia Alonso
  2. Azucena Mora Gutierrez
  3. Miguel Blanco
  4. Jesús E. Blanco
  5. Ghizlane Dahbi
  6. María T. Ferreiro
  7. Cecilia López Capón
  8. Leonardo Alberghini
  9. Sabrina Albonetti
  10. Aurora Echeita Sarrionandía
  11. Marcello Trevisani
  12. Jorge Blanco Álvarez
Journal:
International microbiology: official journal of the Spanish Society for Microbiology

ISSN: 1618-1905

Year of publication: 2007

Volume: 10

Issue: 2

Pages: 109-116

Type: Article

More publications in: International microbiology: official journal of the Spanish Society for Microbiology

Abstract

Feedlot cattle slaughtered at a large abattoir in northern Italy during 2002 were examined for intestinal carriage and carcass contamination with Escherichia coli O157:H7. Carcass samples were taken following the excision method described in the Decision 471/2001/EC, and fecal material was taken from the colon of the calves after evisceration. Bacteria were isolated and identified according to the MFLP-80 and MFLP-90 procedures (Food Directorate's Health Canada's). Eighty-eight non-sorbitol-fermenting E. coli O157:H7 isolates were obtained from 12 of the 45 calves examined. In particular, E. coli O157:H7 isolates were found in 11 (24%) fecal and five (11%) carcass samples. PCR analysis showed that all 11 fecal samples and five carcass samples carried eae-ã1-positive E. coli O157:H7 isolates. In addition, genes encoding Shigatoxins were detected in O157:H7 isolates from nine and two of those 11 fecal and five carcasses, respectively. A representative group of 32 E. coli O157:H7 isolates was analyzed by phage typing and DNA macrorestriction fragment analysis (PFGE). Five phage types (PT8, PT32v, PT32, PT54, and PT not typable) and seven (I-VII) distinct restriction patterns of similarity >85% were detected. Up to three different O157:H7 strains in an individual fecal sample and up to four from the same animal could be isolated. These findings provide evidence of the epidemiological importance of subtyping more than one isolate from the same sample. Phage typing together with PFGE proved to be very useful tools to detect cross-contamination among carcasses and should therefore be included in HACCP programs at abattoirs. The results showed that the same PFGE-phage type E. coli O157:H7 profile was detected in the fecal and carcass samples from an animal, and also in two more carcasses corresponding to two animals slaughtered the same day.