Evidence for the Emergence of Non-O1 and Non-O139 Vibrio cholerae Strains with Pathogenic Potential by Exchange of O-Antigen Biosynthesis Regions
Evidence for the Emergence of Non-O1 and Non-O139 Vibrio cholerae Strains with Pathogenic Potential by Exchange of O-Antigen Biosynthesis Regions
ABSTRACT The novel epidemic strain Vibrio cholerae O139 Bengal originated from a seventh-pandemic O1 El Tor strain by antigenic shift resulting from homologous recombination-mediated exchange of O-antigen biosynthesis ( wb* ) clusters. Conservation of the genetic organization of wb* regions seen in other serogroups raised the possibility of the existence of pathogenic non-O1 and non-O139 V. cholerae strains that emerged by similar events. To test this hypothesis, 300 V. cholerae isolates of non-O1 and non-O139 serogroups were screened for the presence of virulence genes and an epidemic genetic background by DNA dot blotting, IS 1004 fingerprinting, and restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) analysis. We found four non-O1 strains (serogroups O27, O37, O53, and O65) with an O1 genetic backbone suggesting exchange of wb* clusters. DNA sequence analysis of the O37 wb* region revealed that a novel ∼23.4-kb gene cluster had replaced all but the ∼4.2-kb right junction of the 22-kb O1 wbe region. In sharp contrast to the backbones, the virulence regions of the four strains were quite heterogeneous; the O53 and O65 strains had the El Tor vibrio pathogenicity island (VPI) cluster, the O37 strain had the classical VPI cluster, and the O27 strain had a novel VPI cluster. Two of the four strains carried CTXφ; the O27 strain possessed a CTXφ with a recently reported immune specificity ( rstR-4 ** allele) and a novel ctxB allele, and the O37 strain had an El Tor CTXφ ( rstR ET allele) and novel ctxAB alleles. Although the O53 and O65 strains lacked the ctxAB genes, they carried a pre-CTXφ (i.e., rstR cla ). Identification of non-O1 and non-O139 serogroups with pathogenic potential in epidemic genetic backgrounds means that attention should be paid to possible future epidemics caused by these serogroups and to the need for new, rapid vaccine development strategies.
- University of Maryland School of Medicine United States
- University of Maryland, Baltimore United States
- VA Maryland Health Care System United States
- National Institute of Infectious Diseases Japan
Base Sequence, Gene Transfer, Horizontal, Virulence, Multigene Family, Molecular Sequence Data, O Antigens, Vibrio cholerae, Polymorphism, Restriction Fragment Length
Base Sequence, Gene Transfer, Horizontal, Virulence, Multigene Family, Molecular Sequence Data, O Antigens, Vibrio cholerae, Polymorphism, Restriction Fragment Length
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