Genomic Epidemiology and Evolution of Escherichia coli in Wild Animals in Mexico
byRobert Murphy, Martin Palm, Ville Mustonen, Jonas Warringer, Anne Farewell, Leopold Parts, Danesh Moradigaravand
Research ArticleYear:2021
Extra Information
Msphere, 6(1)
Abstract
Escherichia coli is a common bacterial species in the gastrointestinal
tracts of warm-blooded animals and humans. Pathogenicity and
antimicrobial resistance in E. coli may emerge via host switching from
animal reservoirs. Despite its potential clinical importance, knowledge
of the population structure of commensal E. coli within wild hosts and
the epidemiological links between E. coli in nonhuman hosts and E. coli
in humans is still scarce. In this study, we analyzed the whole-genome
sequencing data of a collection of 119 commensal E. coli strains
recovered from the guts of 55 mammal and bird species in Mexico and
Venezuela in the 1990s. We observed low concordance between the
population structures of E. coli isolates colonizing wild animals and
the phylogeny, taxonomy, and ecological and physiological attributes of
the host species, with distantly related E. coli strains often
colonizing the same or similar …