 
Getting to the bottom of the burger bug - Microbiology Today:
August 2004 issue
27 July 2004
Eradicating deadly E. coli O157:H7 from the bottoms of
cows may prevent future outbreaks of food poisoning by this famous
bug. According to an article in the August 2004 issue Microbiology
Today, the quarterly magazine of the Society for General Microbiology,
the majority of people with E. coli O157:H7, picked up
the infection from cattle, either through direct contact with
faeces or by consuming contaminated meat or milk.
Researchers at the University of Edinburgh, in collaboration
with the Scottish Agricultural College and the Moredun Research
Institute, were surprised to find that E. coli O157:H7
colonises only the last few centimetres of the cattle gut. As
a result, bacteria are spread onto the surface of faeces as they
leave the cow and can easily contaminate the environment.
"We are focused on understanding where and how E. coli
O157:H7 colonises cattle", explains Dr David Gally from the
University of Edinburgh. "Our aim is to produce vaccines
that stop the bacteria from attaching themselves to the gut wall.
This prevents colonisation and therefore reduces the threat to
human health from this dangerous pathogen."
In the laboratory E. coli has long been associated with
advancing research in cell and molecular biology and this issue
of Microbiology Today explores some of the many aspects
of E. coli, from the friend to the foe. Thanks to genomics,
scientists now understand why some strains of E. coli are
harmless, whilst others are deadly. For example, E. coli
O157:H7 was made infamous due to a fatal outbreak in Scotland
in 1996, whilst other strains, such as E. coli K-12, the
most well studied bacterium in science, have contributed enormously
to our understanding of how cells work.
Other features in the August 2004 issue of Microbiology Today
include:
· Escherichia coli: model and menace (page
114)
· The history of E. coli K-12 (page 116)
· Diarrhoeal disease in the UK (page 117)
· E. coli as a probiotic (page 119)
· E. coli as an applied environmental tool
(page 120)
· Comparative genomics (page 124)
These are just some of the articles that appear, together with
all the regular features and reports of Society activities.
- ENDS -
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