Affiliation:
1. Department of Biology, University of North Carolina at Charlotte, Charlotte, North Carolina 28223
Abstract
ABSTRACT
We recently reported a simple PCR procedure that targets a sequence variation of the virulence-correlated gene locus
vcg
. It was found that 90% of all clinical isolates possessed the
vcgC
sequence variant, while 93% of all environmental isolates possessed the
vcgE
sequence variant. Here we report that the clinical genotype of
Vibrio vulnificus
is significantly better able to survive in human serum than is the environmental genotype. The presence of a siderophore-encoding gene,
viuB
, influenced serum survivability among all isolates of
V. vulnificus
tested. Those strains positive for
viuB
(all C-type strains but very few E-type strains) showed greater serum survivability than those lacking
viuB
(most E-type strains). The addition of iron (in the form of ferric ammonium citrate) to human serum restored the survival of E-type strains lacking
viuB
to levels not significantly different from those of C-type and E-type strains that possess
viuB
. These findings suggest that
viuB
may dictate serum survival in both C- and E-type strains of
V. vulnificus
and may explain why some strains (C- and E-type strains) are pathogenic and others (predominately E-type strains) are not. Additionally, C-type strains exhibited a cross-protective response against human serum, not exhibited by E-type strains, after incubation under nutrient and osmotic downshift conditions that mimicked estuarine waters. This suggests that the nutrient/osmotic environment may influence the survival of
V. vulnificus
following entry into the human body, leading to selection of the C genotype over the E genotype.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Ecology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Food Science,Biotechnology
Cited by
40 articles.
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