Estudi de la prevalença d’Escherichia coli adherent-invasiva (AIEC) en l’aigua residual de la ciutat de Girona

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Universitat de Girona. Facultat de Ciències

Martínez Medina, Margarita

Borrego i Moré, Carles

Data de publicació

2025-06



Resum

The adherent-invasive Escherichia coli (AIEC) pathotype is closely associated with inflammatory bowel diseases, such as Crohn’s disease. It is characterized by its ability to adhere and invade intestinal epithelial cells, triggering an inflammatory response, as well as its capacity to survive and replicate within macrophages, thereby evading immune defenses. In this study, we analyzed the presence and survival of AIEC in the wastewater of the city of Girona (Campdorà wastewater treatment plant) in order to assess whether this pathotype can be detected in wastewater as a first step toward conducting epidemiological studies of Crohn’s disease through wastewater monitoring. In addition, we evaluated the role of protozoa inhabiting the plant’s reactors as potential reservoirs for AIEC. We observed an increase in the proportion of potential AIEC strains in the plant’s effluent (9.98%) compared to the influent water (5.35%). This finding contrasts with the overall decrease in E. coli concentration between the two samples (6×104 CFU/mL at the inlet versus 1.01×102 CFU/mL at the outlet), suggesting that AIEC strains may possess resistance or protection mechanisms against the plant’s treatment processes. Moreover, the presence of protozoa in the activated sludge raises the hypothesis that AIEC could survive inside these microorganisms, similarly to how they survive within human macrophages. Therefore, we examined the protozoan population in the sludge and validated a protocol to isolate E. coli from within them. Finally, using an intestinal cell assay, we assessed whether the intracellular isolates exhibited the adherent-invasive phenotype. Although only one of the endosymbiotic E. coli isolates was identified as AIEC, its detection opens new research avenues into the survival of AIEC pathotypes within protozoa. While it is still too early to definitively state that the AIEC pathotype is detectable in wastewater, our results represent a starting point for future wastewater-based epidemiological studies aimed at determining the community prevalence of these AIEC strains, similar to what has been done with other pathogens (e.g., SARS-CoV-2). In any case, the results suggest that wastewater treatment plants could act as reservoirs or selection points for pathogenic and resistant strains, with broad environmental and public health implications


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