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Pathogenic potential of environmental Vibrio cholerae strains carrying genetic variants of the toxin-coregulated pilus pathogenicity island
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Published
2003
Author(s)
Faruque, Shah M.
Kamruzzaman, M.
Meraj, Ismail M.
Chowdhury, Nityannanda
Nair, G. Balakrish
Sack, R. Bradley
Colwell, Rita R.
Sack, David A.
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Abstract
The major virulence factors of toxigenic Vibrio cholerae are cholera toxin, which is encoded by a lysogenic filamentous bacteriophage (CTXPhi), and toxin-coregulated pilus (TCP), an essential colonization factor that is also the receptor for CTXPhi. The genes involved in the biosynthesis of TCP reside in a pathogenicity island, which has been reported to correspond to the genome of another filamentous phage (designated VPIPhi) and to encode functions necessary for the production of infectious VPIPhi particles. We examined 46 V. cholerae strains having diverse origins and carrying different genetic variants of the TCP island for the production of the VPIPhi and CTXPhi in different culture conditions, including induction of prophages with mitomycin C and UV irradiation. Although 9 of 10 V. cholerae O139 strains and 12 of 15 toxigenic El Tor strains tested produced extracellular CTXPhi, none of the 46 TCP-positive strains produced detectable VPIPhi in repeated assays, which detected as few as 10 particles of a control CTX phage per ml. These results contradict the previous report regarding VPIPhi-mediated horizontal transfer of the TCP genes and suggest that the TCP island is unable to support the production of phage particles. Further studies are necessary to understand the mechanism of horizontal transfer of the TCP island
Citation
Infect Immun 2003 Jun;71(6):2993-9