Publication | Closed Access
ADHESION OF ENTEROPATHOGENIC ESCHERICHIA COLI TO PIG INTESTINAL BRUSH BORDERS: THE EXISTENCE OF TWO PIG PHENOTYPES
293
Citations
15
References
1975
Year
Medical MicrobiologyK88-positive Escherichia ColiPathogenic MicrobiologyPathogenesisGastroenterologyPathologyPathogen CharacterizationPorcine DiseaseVeterinary MicrobiologyMicrobiologyInfection ControlDigestive TractBrush BordersMedicineGut BarrierClinical MicrobiologyAntimicrobial ResistanceK88-positive E. Coli
An in-vitro test that demonstrates adhesion of K88-positive Escherichia coli to brush borders prepared from the small intestine of the pig is described. K88-positive E. coli adhered to the brush borders from some pigs ("positive" pigs) but not others ("negative" pigs). The sires of the pigs tested could be placed into two groups, namely, those that sired only "positive" piglets, and those that sired a mixture of "positive" and "negative" piglets. The incidence of the two phenotypes in litters indicated that "positive" and "negative" piglets arose as a result of simple Mendelian inheritance. It is suggested that "negative" pigs could be bred and that they might have a natural resistance to neonatal infection with K88-positive E. coli.
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