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conferenceseries
.com
Volume 7, Issue 1 (Suppl)
J Clin Exp Pathol
ISSN: 2161-0681 JCEP, an open access journal
Pediatric Pathology & Laboratory Medicine 2017
March 15-16, 2017
March 15-16, 2017 London, UK
12
th
International Conference on
Pediatric Pathology & Laboratory Medicine
Comparative gene expression of urine and fecal
E. coli
isolated from women with acute cystitis
Jyotsna Agarwal, Richa Srivastava
and
Sugandha Srivastava
King George’s Medical University, India
T
emporal and spatial regulation of gene expression induced by bladder environment may be accountable for difference in the
pathogenicity of urinary and fecal
E. coli
isolates. In order to better understand the pathogenesis of urinary tract infection
(UTI), genetic and functional (expression) profiles of cystitis and fecal
E. coli
isolates were analyzed in the present study. Fifty sets
of concurrent urinary and dominant fecal
E. coli
from women with acute cystitis were correlated by analyzing their mRNA and
phenotypic expression for five virulence genes (VGs) viz.
fimH, papG alleles, hlyA, iutA
and
traT
along with phylogenetic grouping.
Predominance of phylogenetic group B2 (48% and 40%, respectively) and higher prevalence of VGs
fimH
(82% and 78%), followed
by
traT
(66% and 46%), and
iutA
(44% and 40%) was observed in both urinary and fecal
E. coli
isolates, respectively; with
traT
being
the only gene significantly associated with urinary isolates (p=0.04). Number of urinary
E. coli
expressing mRNA and corresponding
phenotype of the respective gene tested was more in urinary isolates as compared to fecal isolates; though this difference was
statistically significant only for
traT
(p=0.02). Differences between genetic and expression profiles of concurrent dominant fecal and
cystitis
E. coli
were not prominent; indicating establishment of symptomatic infection might be more dependent on the host factors
rather than on the virulence potential of uropathogens alone.
Biography
Jyotsna Agarwal has joined the King George’s Medical University, Lucknow as a Faculty in 2002 and is currently working as a Professor of Microbiology and the In-
charge of Bacteriology Laboratory. She received her MBBS degree from CMC, Vellore and MD in Microbiology from BHU, Varanasi. She is Nodal Officer In-charge
for Regional Centre of WHO sponsored Diphtheria Surveillance Project and Regional RTI/STI Centre for the state of Uttar Pradesh. Her research interests include
antimicrobial resistance, molecular diagnostics; focus areas are infections of children including pneumonia, septicemia and meningitis; and sexually transmitted/
reproductive tract infection along with pathogenesis of urinary tract infections in women. She has nearly 50 publications in reputed journals and a book chapter to
her credit.
jyotsna.kgmu@gmail.comJyotsna Agarwal et al., J Clin Exp Pathol 2017, 7:1 (Suppl)
http://dx.doi.org/10.4172/2161-0681.C1.031