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1.
J Clin Microbiol ; 50(5): 1733-6, 2012 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22357499

ABSTRACT

A PCR-based assay was developed to discriminate the classical, El Tor, and Haitian types of ctxB alleles. Our retrospective study using this newly developed PCR showed that Haitian ctxB first appeared in Kolkata during April 2006, and 93.3% of strains isolated during 2011 carried the new allele. Dendrogram analysis showed a pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE) pattern of the new variant strains isolated recently that was distinct from the PFGE pattern of the strains carrying classical ctxB that closely matched the 2006 to 2007 variant strains.


Subject(s)
Cholera Toxin/genetics , Cholera/microbiology , Polymerase Chain Reaction/methods , Vibrio cholerae O1/classification , Vibrio cholerae O1/genetics , Cluster Analysis , DNA, Bacterial/chemistry , DNA, Bacterial/genetics , Electrophoresis, Gel, Pulsed-Field , Humans , India , Molecular Sequence Data , Molecular Typing , Retrospective Studies , Sequence Analysis, DNA , Vibrio cholerae O1/isolation & purification
2.
Nature ; 477(7365): 462-5, 2011 Aug 24.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21866102

ABSTRACT

Vibrio cholerae is a globally important pathogen that is endemic in many areas of the world and causes 3-5 million reported cases of cholera every year. Historically, there have been seven acknowledged cholera pandemics; recent outbreaks in Zimbabwe and Haiti are included in the seventh and ongoing pandemic. Only isolates in serogroup O1 (consisting of two biotypes known as 'classical' and 'El Tor') and the derivative O139 can cause epidemic cholera. It is believed that the first six cholera pandemics were caused by the classical biotype, but El Tor has subsequently spread globally and replaced the classical biotype in the current pandemic. Detailed molecular epidemiological mapping of cholera has been compromised by a reliance on sub-genomic regions such as mobile elements to infer relationships, making El Tor isolates associated with the seventh pandemic seem superficially diverse. To understand the underlying phylogeny of the lineage responsible for the current pandemic, we identified high-resolution markers (single nucleotide polymorphisms; SNPs) in 154 whole-genome sequences of globally and temporally representative V. cholerae isolates. Using this phylogeny, we show here that the seventh pandemic has spread from the Bay of Bengal in at least three independent but overlapping waves with a common ancestor in the 1950s, and identify several transcontinental transmission events. Additionally, we show how the acquisition of the SXT family of antibiotic resistance elements has shaped pandemic spread, and show that this family was first acquired at least ten years before its discovery in V. cholerae.


Subject(s)
Cholera/epidemiology , Cholera/transmission , Pandemics/statistics & numerical data , Vibrio cholerae/genetics , Vibrio cholerae/isolation & purification , Cholera/microbiology , Genome, Bacterial/genetics , Haiti/epidemiology , Humans , Likelihood Functions , Molecular Epidemiology , Phylogeny , Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide/genetics , Vibrio cholerae/classification , Zimbabwe/epidemiology
3.
J Clin Microbiol ; 48(10): 3666-74, 2010 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20668130

ABSTRACT

Vibrio cholerae O1 biotype El Tor (ET), the cause of the current 7th pandemic, has recently been replaced in Asia and Africa by an altered ET biotype possessing cholera toxin (CTX) of the classical (CL) biotype that originally caused the first six pandemics before becoming extinct in the 1980s. Until recently, the ET prototype was the biotype circulating in Peru; a detailed understanding of the evolutionary trend of V. cholerae causing endemic cholera in Latin America is lacking. The present retrospective microbiological, molecular, and phylogenetic study of V. cholerae isolates recovered in Mexico (n = 91; 1983 to 1997) shows the existence of the pre-1991 CL biotype and the ET and CL biotypes together with the altered ET biotype in both epidemic and endemic cholera between 1991 and 1997. According to sero- and biotyping data, the altered ET, which has shown predominance in Mexico since 1991, emerged locally from ET and CL progenitors that were found coexisting until 1997. In Latin America, ET and CL variants shared a variable number of phenotypic markers, while the altered ET strains had genes encoding the CL CTX (CTX(CL)) prophage, ctxB(CL) and rstR(CL), in addition to resident rstR(ET), as the underlying regional signature. The distinct regional fingerprints for ET in Mexico and Peru and their divergence from ET in Asia and Africa, as confirmed by subclustering patterns in a pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (NotI)-based dendrogram, suggest that the Mexico epidemic in 1991 may have been a local event and not an extension of the epidemics occurring in Asia and South America. Finally, the CL biotype reservoir in Mexico is unprecedented and must have contributed to the changing epidemiology of global cholera in ways that need to be understood.


Subject(s)
Cholera/epidemiology , Cholera/microbiology , Vibrio cholerae O1/classification , Vibrio cholerae O1/isolation & purification , Bacterial Typing Techniques , Cholera Toxin/genetics , Cluster Analysis , DNA Fingerprinting , DNA, Bacterial/genetics , Electrophoresis, Gel, Pulsed-Field , Genotype , Humans , Mexico/epidemiology , Molecular Epidemiology , Prophages/genetics , Retrospective Studies , Serotyping , Vibrio cholerae O1/genetics , Vibrio cholerae O1/metabolism
4.
J Med Microbiol ; 58(Pt 3): 342-354, 2009 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19208885

ABSTRACT

A collection of environmental and clinical strains of Vibrio cholerae O1 isolated from the beginning of the Latin American epidemic of cholera in 1991 to 2003 from multiple locations in Peru were characterized and compared with V. cholerae O1 El Tor strains of the seventh pandemic from the rest of the world (Asia, Africa, Australia and Europe) using a multilocus virulence gene profiling strategy and DNA sequencing. Peruvian strains differed from El Tor strains from the rest of the world by the failure of PCR to amplify genes VC0512, VC0513, VC0514 and VC0515 in the Vibrio seventh pandemic island-II (VSP-II) gene cluster. Sequencing of the VSP-II gene cluster and its flanking regions in one Peruvian strain (PERU-130) confirmed the PCR results, indicating that the Peruvian strain had low DNA homology (46.6 %) compared to the reference strain N16961 within the VSP-II region encompassing genes VC0511 to VC0515. Based on these differences in VSP-II, and based on the overall similarity between the pulsotypes of the Peruvian strains and the El Tor reference strain N16961, we concluded that the Peruvian, Eurasian and African strains belonged to the same clonal complex, and that the Peruvian strains represented variants that had independently evolved for a relatively short time. Since these ORFs in VSP-II of Peruvian strains are unique and conserved, they could form the basis for tracking the origin of the Peruvian strains and therefore of the Latin American pandemic.


Subject(s)
Cholera/epidemiology , Cholera/microbiology , Disease Outbreaks , Genomic Islands/genetics , Vibrio cholerae/classification , Bacterial Proteins/genetics , Bacterial Typing Techniques , Base Sequence , DNA, Bacterial/chemistry , Electrophoresis, Gel, Pulsed-Field , Environmental Microbiology , Gene Expression Profiling , Humans , Molecular Sequence Data , Multigene Family , Peru/epidemiology , Polymerase Chain Reaction , Sequence Analysis, DNA , Serotyping , Vibrio cholerae/genetics , Vibrio cholerae/pathogenicity , Virulence/genetics
6.
Lancet ; 363(9404): 223-33, 2004 Jan 17.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-14738797

ABSTRACT

Intestinal infection with Vibrio cholerae results in the loss of large volumes of watery stool, leading to severe and rapidly progressing dehydration and shock. Without adequate and appropriate rehydration therapy, severe cholera kills about half of affected individuals. Cholera toxin, a potent stimulator of adenylate cyclase, causes the intestine to secrete watery fluid rich in sodium, bicarbonate, and potassium, in volumes far exceeding the intestinal absorptive capacity. Cholera has spread from the Indian subcontinent where it is endemic to involve nearly the whole world seven times during the past 185 years. V cholerae serogroup O1, biotype El Tor, has moved from Asia to cause pandemic disease in Africa and South America during the past 35 years. A new serogroup, O139, appeared in south Asia in 1992, has become endemic there, and threatens to start the next pandemic. Research on case management of cholera led to the development of rehydration therapy for dehydrating diarrhoea in general, including the proper use of intravenous and oral rehydration solutions. Appropriate case management has reduced deaths from diarrhoeal disease by an estimated 3 million per year compared with 20 years ago. Vaccination was thought to have no role for cholera, but new oral vaccines are showing great promise.


Subject(s)
Cholera , Africa/epidemiology , Asia/epidemiology , Cholera/epidemiology , Cholera/microbiology , Cholera/prevention & control , Cholera Vaccines/therapeutic use , Drug Resistance, Bacterial/genetics , Gene Expression Regulation, Bacterial , Global Health , Humans , Molecular Epidemiology , South America/epidemiology , Vibrio cholerae/classification , Vibrio cholerae/genetics , Vibrio cholerae/metabolism
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