Abstract:
In this study, four antimicrobial growth promoters, including virginiamycin, josamycin, flavophospholipol, poly
2-propenal 2-propenoic acid and ultraviolet light, were tested for their capacity to induce stx-bacteriophages
in 47 Shiga toxin-producing E. coli O157:H7 isolates. Induced bacteriophages were characterized for shiga toxin
subtypes and structural genes by PCR, DNA restriction fragment length polymorphisms (RFLP) and morphological
features by electron microscopy. Bacteriophages were induced from 72.3% (34/47) of the STEC O157:H7 isolates
tested. Bacteriophage induction rates per induction method were as follows: ultraviolet light, 53.2% (25/47);
poly 2-propenal 2-propenoic acid, 42.6% (20/47); virginiamycin, 34.0% (16/47); josamycin, 34.0% (16/47); and
flavophospholipol, 29.8% (14/47). A total of 98 bacteriophages were isolated, but only 59 were digestible by
NdeI, revealing 40 RFLP profiles which could be subdivided in 12 phylogenetic subgroups. Among the 98
bacteriophages, stx2a, stx2c and stx2d were present in 85.7%, 94.9% and 36.7% of bacteriophages, respectively.
The Q, P, CIII, N1, N2 and IS1203 genes were found in 96.9%, 82.7%, 69.4%, 40.8%, 60.2% and 73.5% of the
samples, respectively. Electron microscopy revealed four main representative morphologies which included three
bacteriophages which all had long tails but different head morphologies: long hexagonal head, oval/oblong head
and oval/circular head, and one bacteriophage with an icosahedral/hexagonal head with a short thick contractile
tail. This study demonstrated that virginiamycin, josamycin, flavophospholipol and poly 2-propenal 2-propenoic
acid induce genetically and morphologically diverse free stx-converting bacteriophages from STEC O157:H7.
The possibility that these antimicrobial growth promoters may induce bacteriophages in vivo in animals and
human hosts is a public health concern. Policies aimed at minimizing or banning the use of antimicrobial growth
promoters should be promoted and implemented in countries where these compounds are still in use in animal
agriculture.