Environmental and epidemiological surveillance of Vibrio cholerae in a cholera-endemic region in India with freshwater environs

被引:29
|
作者
Mishra, A. [1 ]
Taneja, N. [1 ]
Sharma, M. [1 ]
机构
[1] Postgrad Inst Med Educ & Res, Dept Med Microbiol, Chandigarh 160012, India
关键词
cholera; environmental; epidemiological; India; surveillance; V; cholerae; MANNOSE-SENSITIVE HEMAGGLUTININ; RTX TOXIN GENE; EL-TOR; PCR ASSAY; O1; VIBRIO-CHOLERAE-O1; BIOTYPE; EMERGENCE; IDENTIFICATION; BACTERIOPHAGE;
D O I
10.1111/j.1365-2672.2011.05191.x
中图分类号
Q81 [生物工程学(生物技术)]; Q93 [微生物学];
学科分类号
071005 ; 0836 ; 090102 ; 100705 ;
摘要
Aim: To conduct epidemiological and ecological surveillance of cholera in freshwater environments. Methods and Results: A freshwater region of India was surveyed between April 2007 and December 2008. Vibrio cholerae was isolated from 59.5% of water and plankton samples (n = 357) and 35.5% of stool samples (n = 290). Isolation from water was dependent on air (r = 0 44) and water temperatures (r = 0 49) (P < 0 01) but was independent of rainfall (r = 0 15), chlorophyll a (r = 0 18), salinity (r = 0 2) or pH (r = 0 2) (P > 0 05). Isolation from plankton was dependent on temperature of air (r = 0 45), water temperature (r = 0 44), chlorophyll a concentration (r = 0 42), pH (r = 0 23) and salinity (r = 0 39) (P < 0 01). Cholera cases correlated with rainfall (r = 0 82, P < 0 01) and chlorophyll a concentration (r = 0 42, P < 0 05), but not with air temperature (r = 0 3, P = 0 37). Vibrio cholerae O1 possessed ctxB, ctxA, rstR and tcpA (ElTor), toxR, toxT, rtxA, rtxC, mshA and hylA. Among non-O1-non-O139, the distribution of virulence-associated and regulatory protein genes was heterogeneous with -0.7, 2 2, 94 77, 97 76, 99 25, 100 and 100% isolates being positive for tcpA, toxT, rtxA, rtxC, hylA, toxR and mshA, respectively. Two-thirds of non-O1-non-O139 isolates exhibited antibiotic resistance to various antibiotics that did not correlate with geographical site or time of origin for the isolates. RAPD and AFLP showed V. cholerae to be a diverse bacterium. AFLP demonstrated separate lineages for non-O1-non-O139 and O1 isolates. Conclusion: Environmental parameters played a significant role in the emergence and spread of cholera and the abundance of V. cholerae. But based on virulence gene profiling and genetic fingerprinting, the possibility of origin of toxigenic isolates from nontoxigenic environmental isolates seems unlikely in freshwater environs of India. Significance and Impact of the Study: This study explains the ecology, epidemiology and seasonality of cholera in freshwater environs.
引用
收藏
页码:225 / 237
页数:13
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Indigenous Vibrio cholerae strains from a non-endemic region are pathogenic
    Islam, Atiqul
    Labbate, Maurizio
    Djordjevic, Steven P.
    Alam, Munirul
    Darling, Aaron
    Melvold, Jacqueline
    Holmes, Andrew J.
    Johura, Fatema T.
    Cravioto, Alejandro
    Charles, Ian G.
    Stokes, H. W.
    OPEN BIOLOGY, 2013, 3
  • [42] Quorum regulated latent environmental cells of toxigenic Vibrio cholerae and their role in cholera outbreaks
    Faruque, Shah Nayeem
    Yamasaki, Shinji
    Faruque, Shah M.
    GUT PATHOGENS, 2024, 16 (01):
  • [43] The Population Structure of Vibrio cholerae from the Chandigarh Region of Northern India
    Abd El Ghany, Moataz
    Chander, Jagadish
    Mutreja, Ankur
    Rashid, Mamoon
    Hill-Cawthorne, Grant A.
    Ali, Shahjahan
    Naeem, Raeece
    Thomson, Nicholas R.
    Dougan, Gordon
    Pain, Arnab
    PLOS NEGLECTED TROPICAL DISEASES, 2014, 8 (07):
  • [44] A new variant of Vibrio cholerae O1 El Tor causing cholera in India
    Goel, Ajay K.
    Jain, Meenu
    Kumar, Pramod
    Bhadauria, Shweta
    Kmboj, Dev V.
    Singh, Lokendra
    JOURNAL OF INFECTION, 2008, 57 (03) : 280 - 281
  • [45] Clinical and Environmental Surveillance for Vibrio cholerae in Resource Constrained Areas: Application during a 1-Year Surveillance in the Far North Region of Cameroon
    Debes, Amanda K.
    Ateudjieu, Jerome
    Guenou, Etienne
    Ebile, Walter
    Sonkoua, Isaac Tadzong
    Njimbia, Anthony Chebe
    Steinwald, Peter
    Ram, Malathi
    Sack, David A.
    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF TROPICAL MEDICINE AND HYGIENE, 2016, 94 (03): : 537 - 543
  • [46] Environmental Vibrio cholerae Strains Harboring Cholera Toxin and Vibrio Pathogenicity Island 1, Nigeria, 2008-2015
    Morgado, Sergio
    Adewale, Akinsinde
    Abiodun, Iwalokun
    Lawal, Salako
    Freitas, Fernanda
    Fonseca, Erica
    Vicente, Ana Carolina
    EMERGING INFECTIOUS DISEASES, 2024, 30 (11) : 2441 - 2444
  • [47] Active surveillance for Vibrio cholerae 01 and vibriophages in sewage water as a potential tool to predict cholera outbreaks
    Madico, G
    Checkley, W
    Gilman, RH
    Bravo, N
    Cabrera, L
    Calderon, M
    Ceballos, A
    JOURNAL OF CLINICAL MICROBIOLOGY, 1996, 34 (12) : 2968 - 2972
  • [48] Production of the new cholera toxin by environmental isolates of Vibrio cholerae non-O1
    Singh, DV
    Tikoo, A
    Sanyal, SC
    JOURNAL OF MEDICAL MICROBIOLOGY, 1996, 45 (01) : 31 - 34
  • [49] Toxigenic Vibrio cholerae can cycle between environmental plastic waste and floodwater: Implications for environmental management of cholera
    Ormsby, Michael J.
    Woodford, Luke
    White, Hannah L.
    Fellows, Rosie
    Oliver, David M.
    Quilliam, Richard S.
    JOURNAL OF HAZARDOUS MATERIALS, 2024, 461
  • [50] Clinical surveillance systems obscure the true cholera infection burden in an endemic region
    Hegde, Sonia T.
    Khan, Ashraful Islam
    Perez-Saez, Javier
    Khan, Ishtiakul Islam
    Hulse, Juan Dent
    Islam, Md Taufiqul
    Khan, Zahid Hasan
    Ahmed, Shakeel
    Bertuna, Taner
    Rashid, Mamunur
    Rashid, Rumana
    Hossain, Md Zakir
    Shirin, Tahmina
    Wiens, Kirsten E.
    Gurley, Emily S.
    Bhuiyan, Taufiqur Rahman
    Qadri, Firdausi
    Azman, Andrew S.
    NATURE MEDICINE, 2024, 30 (03) : 888 - 895