Literature DB >> 11599737

Comparison of antibiogram, virulence genes, ribotypes and DNA fingerprints of Vibrio cholerae of matching serogroups isolated from hospitalised diarrhoea cases and from the environment during 1997-1998 in Calcutta, India.

S Chakraborty, P Garg, T Ramamurthy, M Thungapathra1, J K Gautam1, C Kumar1, S Maiti1, S Yamasaki1, T Shimada1, Y Takeda1, A Ghosh1, G B Nair.   

Abstract

This study identified 17 matching serogroups of Vibrio cholerae belonging to serogroups other than O1 and O139 isolated from human cases and from the environment during a concurrent clinical and environmental study conducted in Calcutta, a cholera endemic area. Isolates within these matching serogroups were compared by various phenotypic and genotypic traits to determine if the environment was the source of the organisms associated with the disease. Clinical strains of V. cholerae were resistant to a greater number of drugs and exhibited multi-drug resistance compared with their environmental counterparts. Except for the presence of the genes for the El Tor haemolysin and the regulatory element ToxR in most of the strains of V. cholerae examined, non-O1, non-O139 V. cholerae strains lacked most of the other known virulence traits associated with toxigenic V. cholerae O1 or O139. Restriction fragment-length polymorphism of virulence-associated genes, ribotypes and DNA fingerprints of strains of matched serogroups showed considerable diversity, although some gene polymorphisms and ribotypes of a few strains of different serogroups were similar. It is concluded that despite sharing the same serogroup, environmental and clinical isolates were genetically heterogeneous and were of different lineages.

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Year:  2001        PMID: 11599737     DOI: 10.1099/0022-1317-50-10-879

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Med Microbiol        ISSN: 0022-2615            Impact factor:   2.472


  13 in total

Review 1.  Meddling Vibrio cholerae Murmurs: A Neoteric Advancement in Cholera Research.

Authors:  M Hema; Srikkanth Balasubramanian; S Adline Princy
Journal:  Indian J Microbiol       Date:  2015-02-24       Impact factor: 2.461

2.  Clonal Dissemination of a Single Vibrio cholerae O1 Biotype El Tor Strain in Sistan-Baluchestan Province of Iran During 2013.

Authors:  Bita Bakhshi; Azam Mahmoudi-Aznaveh; Ali Salimi-Khorashad
Journal:  Curr Microbiol       Date:  2015-04-11       Impact factor: 2.188

3.  Genetic relatedness of selected clinical and environmental non-O1/O139 Vibrio cholerae.

Authors:  Antonina Aydanian; Li Tang; Yuansha Chen; J Glenn Morris; Peter Olsen; Judith A Johnson; G Balakrish Nair; O Colin Stine
Journal:  Int J Infect Dis       Date:  2015-07-08       Impact factor: 3.623

4.  CARB-9, a carbenicillinase encoded in the VCR region of Vibrio cholerae non-O1, non-O139 belongs to a family of cassette-encoded beta-lactamases.

Authors:  Alejandro Petroni; Roberto G Melano; Héctor A Saka; Alicia Garutti; Laura Mange; Fernando Pasterán; Melina Rapoport; Mariana Miranda; Diego Faccone; Alicia Rossi; Paul S Hoffman; Marcelo F Galas
Journal:  Antimicrob Agents Chemother       Date:  2004-10       Impact factor: 5.191

5.  Role of 6-gingerol in reduction of cholera toxin activity in vitro and in vivo.

Authors:  Pallashri Saha; Bornita Das; Keya Chaudhuri
Journal:  Antimicrob Agents Chemother       Date:  2013-07-01       Impact factor: 5.191

6.  Occurrence of antibiotic resistance gene cassettes aac(6')-Ib, dfrA5, dfrA12, and ereA2 in class I integrons in non-O1, non-O139 Vibrio cholerae strains in India.

Authors:  M Thungapathra; Kislay K Sinha; Saumya Ray Chaudhuri; Pallavi Garg; Thandavarayan Ramamurthy; Gopinath Balakrish Nair; Amit Ghosh
Journal:  Antimicrob Agents Chemother       Date:  2002-09       Impact factor: 5.191

7.  Putative virulence traits and pathogenicity of Vibrio cholerae Non-O1, Non-O139 isolates from surface waters in Kolkata, India.

Authors:  Prasanta K Bag; Poulami Bhowmik; Tapas K Hajra; T Ramamurthy; Pradipta Sarkar; Mrinmoyee Majumder; Goutam Chowdhury; Suresh C Das
Journal:  Appl Environ Microbiol       Date:  2008-07-18       Impact factor: 4.792

8.  Incidence, virulence factors, and clonality among clinical strains of non-O1, non-O139 Vibrio cholerae isolates from hospitalized diarrheal patients in Kolkata, India.

Authors:  S Chatterjee; K Ghosh; A Raychoudhuri; G Chowdhury; M K Bhattacharya; A K Mukhopadhyay; T Ramamurthy; S K Bhattacharya; Karl E Klose; R K Nandy
Journal:  J Clin Microbiol       Date:  2009-01-21       Impact factor: 5.948

Review 9.  Inhibition of virulence potential of Vibrio cholerae by natural compounds.

Authors:  Shinji Yamasaki; Masahiro Asakura; Sucharit Basu Neogi; Atsushi Hinenoya; Emiko Iwaoka; Shunji Aoki
Journal:  Indian J Med Res       Date:  2011-02       Impact factor: 2.375

10.  Population structure and evolution of non-O1/non-O139 Vibrio cholerae by multilocus sequence typing.

Authors:  Sophie Octavia; Anna Salim; Jacob Kurniawan; Connie Lam; Queenie Leung; Sunjukta Ahsan; Peter R Reeves; G Balakrish Nair; Ruiting Lan
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2013-06-11       Impact factor: 3.240

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