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. 2016 Aug 4;4(4):e00768-16. doi: 10.1128/genomeA.00768-16

Draft Genome Sequences of Two Avian Pathogenic Escherichia coli Strains of Clinical Importance, E44 and E51

Troels Ronco a,, Marc Stegger b, Paal S Andersen b, Karl Pedersen a, Lili Li c, Ida C N Thøfner d, Rikke H Olsen d
PMCID: PMC4974317  PMID: 27491996

Abstract

Avian pathogenic Escherichia coli strains have remarkable impacts on animal welfare and the production economy in the poultry industry worldwide. Here, we present the draft genomes of two isolates from chickens (E44 and E51) obtained from field outbreaks and subsequently investigated for their potential for use in autogenous vaccines for broiler breeders.

GENOME ANNOUNCEMENT

Avian pathogenic Escherichia coli (APEC) causing colibacillosis in commercial poultry is an important bacterial pathogen (1). Whereas “colibacillosis” commonly refers to systemic or localized infection in broilers, ascending infections due to E. coli in breeders and layers may lead to infection of the reproductive tract (2), with significant impacts on animal welfare and the poultry production economy (3). Nevertheless, there are few commercially available vaccines for the protection of layers and broilers against E. coli infection. Consequently, the use of autogenous E. coli vaccines is a common practice (4). The aims of using these vaccines are two-fold: direct protection of the breeders and indirect protection of the offspring through the passage of maternally derived antibodies.

In recent years, outbreaks due to E. coli in broiler breeders and broilers have increased in Scandinavian countries, expediting the introduction of a new autogenous E. coli vaccine program for broiler breeders. Here we present the draft genomes of two E. coli isolates (E44 and E51) included in this autogenous vaccine.

Fragment libraries were constructed using a Nextera XT kit (Illumina) followed by 251-bp paired-end sequencing (MiSeq; Illumina) according to manufacturer’s instructions. Genomics Workbench 6.5 (CLC bio) was used for de novo assembly of the raw reads. It resulted in totals for size of assembly/N50 of 5,125,126 bp/83,776 bp and 5,178,940 bp/100,046 bp, total numbers of contigs of 195 and 217, and average coverages/G+C contents of 91×/50.5% and 58×/50.5% for E44 and E51, respectively.

The contigs were annotated in the NCBI Prokaryotic Genome Automatic Annotation Pipeline (PGAAP) (5). In total, E44 had 5,171 putative genes, of which 4,868 were protein-coding sequences (CDSs), whereas E51 had 5,305 putative genes, including 4,986 protein CDSs.

Various types of virulence genes that previously have been associated with APEC isolates (6) were extracted from NCBI and identified in the draft genomes using MyDbFinder 1.1 (https://cge.cbs.dtu.dk/services/MyDbFinder/). E44 carried fewer virulence genes (fimA, fimC, iroN, iss, iucA, iucD, ompA, and vat) than E51 (cvaB/C, cvi, fimA, fimC, fyuA, ibeA, iroN, irp2, iss iucA, iucD, and ompA). According to PathogenFinder (7), both E44 and E51 were predicted to be human pathogens, with probabilities of 93% and 94%, because they matched 533 and 856 pathogenic families, respectively. None of the strains carried any antibiotic resistance genes, as verified using ResFinder 2.1 (8). In silico typing using MLST 1.8 (9) and SerotypeFinder 1.1 (10) showed that the sequence types (STs)/serotypes of E44 and E51 were O78:H4/ST117 and O2:H5/ST140, respectively. Field production data from farms using the E44/E51-based vaccine, experimental data obtained from in vivo infection models, and further genome analyses could provide useful knowledge regarding development of new vaccines and insight into virulent properties.

Accession number(s).

The two whole-genome shotgun projects have been deposited in DDBJ/ENA/GenBank under the accession numbers LXWV00000000 (E44) and LYPJ00000000 (E51). The versions described in this paper are the first versions.

Footnotes

Citation Ronco T, Stegger M, Andersen PS, Pedersen K, Li L, Thøfner ICN, Olsen RH. 2016. Draft genome sequences of two avian pathogenic Escherichia coli strains of clinical importance, E44 and E51. Genome Announc 4(4):e00768-16. doi:10.1128/genomeA.00768-16.

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