Escherichia coli strains isolated from outbreaks of diarrheal disease were tested for the presence of adhesive factors. Fifty-one of these
strains belonged to traditional infantile entero-pathogenic serotypes (EPEC) and 17 belonged to other serotypes. None of these
strains were enterotoxigenic and none possessed colonization factors CFA/I or CFA/II, which have been described among strains
of enterotoxigenic
E. coli (ETEC). Enterotoxigenic
E. coli strains from patients with diarrhea and strains which were neither EPEC nor ETEC from subjects without diarrhea were also
examined. By means of a tissue culture technique using HEp-2 cells, a new adhesive factor was found to occur with greater
frequency in EPEC strains. The adhesive factor was found less frequently in the other groups of
E. coli studied. It was distinct from type 1 pili and was not inhibited by the presence of
D-mannose.