Abstract
AbstractOf over 200 different identified Vibrio cholerae serogroups only the O1 serogroup is consistently associated with endemic and epidemic cholera disease. The O1 serogroup has two serologically distinguishable variants, the Ogawa and Inaba serotypes, which differ only by a methyl group present on the terminal sugar of the Ogawa O-antigen but absent from Inaba strains. This methylation is catalyzed by a methyltransferase encoded by the wbeT gene, which in Inaba strains is disrupted by mutation. It is currently thought that there is little difference between the two serotypes. However, here we show, using isogenic pairs of O1 El Tor V. cholerae, that Inaba strains show significantly different patterns of gene expression and are significantly less able than the corresponding Ogawa strains to cause cholera in an infant mouse infection model. Our results suggest that changes in gene expression resulting from the loss of the wbeT gene lead to reduced virulence and possibly also reduced survival fitness outside the human host.Author SummaryThe bacterium Vibrio cholerae causes the pandemic diarrheal disease cholera. Despite many identified serotypes of V. cholerae only one, O1, causes pandemic cholera. The O1 serotype of pandemic V. cholerae has two distinguishable variants (called Ogawa and Inaba) long considered to be clinically and epidemiologically equivalent. Cholera outbreaks consist only of one the two variants at any time. In general, Ogawa strains cause the majority of outbreaks with relatively short-lived Inaba outbreaks occurring sporadically. We have suggested earlier that Inaba outbreaks occur during periods of environmental selective pressure against the Ogawa serotype. We demonstrate here that the two variants are not clinically equivalent. The Ogawa serotype is better able to respond to infection in an animal model by up regulating the expression of virulence genes essential for disease development. We suggest that this phenomenon is the result of wider ranging differences in gene expression resulting from the mutation that converts Ogawa into Inaba strains, and may help to explain the dominance of the Ogawa serotype in nature.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
2 articles.
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