Resumen:
Healthy lambs are one of the major reservoirs of Shiga toxin-producing Escherichia coli (STEC) and it is known as
the cause of foodborne diseases (FBD). The work objective is to characterize (STEC) isolates obtained from rectal
swabs of healthy lambs herds, a total of 183 samples were obtained from sheep production units of the State of
Mexico. E. coli isolates were confirmed through the amplification of the uid A gene. antimicrobial sensitivity
pattern was determined through Kirby-Bauer (CLSI, 2012) test and the presence stx1, stx2 and eae genes from
isolates by multiplex PCR. Serotyping was performed using specific anti-O and anti-H sera (SERUNAM, Mexico)
for 185 Somatic and 56 flagellar antigens. 126 isolates biochemically and molecularly identified as E. coli were
obtained, of which 80 did not express any virulence factor and 46 expressed at least some (STEC) virulence
factor. The highest percentage of E. coli resistance was for tetracycline 48.7% (39/80), followed by nalidixic acid
13.7% (11/80), gentamicin 6.2% (5/80) and Ciprofloxacin 3.7% (3/80). Resistance to amikacin, cefotaxime and
ceftazidime were not detected. A frequency of 46 STEC isolates (36.2%) were obtained, of which 28/46 (22.0%)
expressed stx1, stx2 3/46 (6.5%), stx1, stx2 13/46 (10.2%) and eae 2/46 (1.6%). Thirty different serotypes were
obtained. The three serotypes with the highest number of isolates (four each) were: O76:H19, O118:H27 and
O146:H21 which have been identified as a cause of diarrhea in human population. An isolate of serogroup O104
was obtained, with a significant importance for European public health. In virtue of the discovered serotypes and
the virulence factors distribution, we can affirm that the obtained isolates from lambs in the State of Mexico are
classifiable as atypical STEC of low virulence.