The O139 Serogroup of<i>Vibrio cholerae</i>Comprises Diverse Clones of Epidemic and Nonepidemic Strains Derived from Multiple<i>V. cholerae</i>O1 or Non‐O1 Progenitors

Shah M. Faruque(International Centre for Diarrhoeal Disease Research), Manujendra N. Saha(International Centre for Diarrhoeal Disease Research), Md Asadulghani(International Centre for Diarrhoeal Disease Research), David A. Sack(International Centre for Diarrhoeal Disease Research), R. Bradley Sack(Johns Hopkins University), Yoshifumi Takeda(National Institute of Infectious Diseases), G. Balakrish Nair(National Institute of Cholera and Enteric Diseases)
The Journal of Infectious Diseases
October 1, 2000
Cited by 41Open Access
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Abstract

Sixty-four representative strains of Vibrio cholerae O139 were analyzed, to re-examine the origin of this serogroup. Ribotyping differentiated the strains into 3 HindIII and 7 BglI ribotypes. One HindIII and 5 BglI ribotypes were shared by all toxigenic O139 strains. Of 6 nontoxigenic O139 strains, 3 shared ribotypes with the toxigenic strains, carried genes encoding toxin coregulated pilus, and were susceptible to the cholera toxin-converting bacteriophage CTXPhi. The remaining 3 strains belonged to 2 different ribotypes distinct from toxigenic O139 strains and were resistant to CTXPhi and JA-1, an O139-specific lytic bacteriophage. Polymerase chain reaction amplicons corresponding to the gmhD gene carried by these 3 strains also differed from those of the toxigenic O139 strains but were identical to those of 15 environmental non-O1-non-O139 strains. Thus, the O139 antigen is present in different lineages, and this serogroup appears to comprise epidemic and nonepidemic strains derived separately from different progenitors.


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