Virulence genotype and phenotype of two clinical isolates of Arcobacter butzleri obtained from patients with different pathologies.
Itsaso BaztarrikaAdrián Salazar-SánchezSilvia Hernaez CrespoJosé Israel López MironesAndrés Canut-BlascoRodrigo AlonsoIlargi Martinez-BallesterosIrati Martinez-MalaxetxebarriaPublished in: Archives of microbiology (2023)
The surge in human arcobacteriosis has increased interest in determining the mechanisms involved in the pathogenesis of Arcobacter butzleri. Here, genomic analyses and in vitro Caco-2 infection, motility, urease and antimicrobial susceptibility testing (AST) assays were used to characterise the virulence and antimicrobial resistance (AMR) determinants of strains HC-1, isolated from a patient with travellers' diarrhoea, and HC-2, isolated from another with pruritus. AMR determinants conferring resistance to tetracycline (tetO, present in both genomes) and to ampicillin and amoxicillin-clavulanic acid (bla3, present in HC-2) were identified. The same determinants associated with flagellum, chemotaxis, adhesion and invasion were detected in both, but HC-1 lacked eight flagellar genes. The urease cluster was only present in HC-1. Motility and urease tests confirmed the genetic differences between strains, but no genetic marker related to the inability of HC-2 to adhere and invade was identified. This inability could be conditioning the patient's pathology.