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1.
Vibrio cholerae O1 can cause diarrheal disease that may be life-threatening without treatment. Natural infection results in long-lasting protective immunity, but the role of T cells in this immune response has not been well characterized. In contrast, robust B-cell responses to V. cholerae infection have been observed. In particular, memory B-cell responses to T-cell-dependent antigens persist for at least 1 year, whereas responses to lipopolysaccharide, a T-cell-independent antigen, wane more rapidly after infection. We hypothesize that protective immunity is mediated by anamnestic responses of memory B cells in the gut-associated lymphoid tissue, and T-cell responses may be required to generate and maintain durable memory B-cell responses. In this study, we examined B- and T-cell responses in patients with severe V. cholerae infection. Using the flow cytometric assay of the specific cell-mediated immune response in activated whole blood, we measured antigen-specific T-cell responses using V. cholerae antigens, including the toxin-coregulated pilus (TcpA), a V. cholerae membrane preparation, and the V. cholerae cytolysin/hemolysin (VCC) protein. Our results show that memory T-cell responses develop by day 7 after infection, a time prior to and concurrent with the development of B-cell responses. This suggests that T-cell responses to V. cholerae antigens may be important for the generation and stability of memory B-cell responses. The T-cell proliferative response to VCC was of a higher magnitude than responses observed to other V. cholerae antigens.Vibrio cholerae is a gram-negative bacterium that can cause a severe, acute secretory diarrhea. Serological differentiation of V. cholerae strains is based on the O-side chain of the lipopolysaccharide (LPS) component of the outer membrane. Of the more than 200 serogroups of V. cholerae identified, only the O1 and O139 serogroups can cause epidemic cholera (44). These pathogens are noninvasive and colonize the mucosal surface of the small intestine (44).Natural infection with V. cholerae is known to provide protection against subsequent disease, but the mechanism of this protective immunity is not fully characterized. The vibriocidal antibody is a complement-dependent bactericidal antibody that is associated with protection from infection. However, no known threshold level of the vibriocidal antibody confers complete protection from V. cholerae infection, and some individuals with low serum vibriocidal antibody titers are still protected. This suggests that the vibriocidal titer may be a surrogate marker (16, 45). Elevated serum immunoglobulin A (IgA) antibody levels specific for the B subunit of cholera toxin (CTB), the major structural subunit of a type IV pilus (TcpA), and LPS are also associated with protective immunity in areas where cholera is endemic (19). However, after natural infection, the serum levels of these antibodies wane more rapidly than protective immunity (19). Patients with cholera develop memory B-cell responses of both the IgG and the IgA isotype to at least two V. cholerae protein antigens, CTB and TcpA. These responses are detectable for at least 1 year after infection and persist even after V. cholerae antigen-specific antibody-secreting cells and serum antibody titers have returned to baseline (18). B-cell memory responses also develop for the T-cell independent antigen LPS, but these responses wane more rapidly than memory B-cell responses to protein antigens, suggesting that durable memory B-cell responses to some V. cholerae antigens may be T-cell dependent (18).We have recently demonstrated that cholera patients mount a primed T-cell response in the mucosa after V. cholerae O1 infection (6). We hypothesize that protection from cholera may be mediated by memory B cells capable of an anamnestic response in the gut mucosa and that these memory B cells may depend on stimulation provided by memory T cells for their development and maintenance. T cells may contribute to the activation of B cells during V. cholerae infection by secreting stimulatory cytokines and direct contact with B cells in lymph nodes. Therefore, T cells may have an important role in protective immunity to V. cholerae infection.We characterized the memory T-cell responses to V. cholerae antigens following natural V. cholerae infection and compared these with serological responses to the same antigens. Previously, our group has studied various V. cholerae antigens, including mannose-sensitive hemagglutinin, TcpA, CTB, and LPS (22, 33, 37). We also included in the present study responses to a novel antigen, V. cholerae cytolysin/hemolysin (VCC) (31, 32). The hly gene that encodes the VCC protein is widespread across both pathogenic and environmental strains of V. cholerae, suggesting that VCC may impart an advantage to the organism (42). Although the precise role of VCC in V. cholerae infection is unknown, VCC is the primary virulence factor in V. cholerae infection with non-O1, non-O139 strains that do not produce cholera toxin (12, 46). The immune response to VCC is not well understood; however, recent studies suggest that VCC may promote a Th2 response in V. cholerae infection (2). In addition, the cytolytic activity of VCC may generate epithelial destruction that allows other V. cholerae antigens to penetrate the mucosa and promote the inflammatory response observed in V. cholerae infection (35, 39).  相似文献   

2.
Infection with Vibrio cholerae and oral cholera vaccines (OCVs) induce transient circulating plasmablast responses that peak within approximately 7 days after infection or vaccination. We previously demonstrated that plasmablast responses strongly correlate with subsequent levels of V. cholerae-specific duodenal antibodies up to 6 months after V. cholerae infection. Hence, plasmablast responses provide an early window into the immunologic memory at the mucosal surface. In this study, we characterized plasmablast responses following V. cholerae infection using a flow cytometrically defined population and compared V. cholerae-specific responses in adult patients with V. cholerae O1 infection and vaccinees who received the OCV Dukoral (Crucell Vaccines Canada). Among flow cytometrically sorted populations of gut-homing plasmablasts, almost 50% of the cells recognized either cholera toxin B subunit (CtxB) or V. cholerae O1 lipopolysaccharide (LPS). Using a traditional enzyme-linked immunosorbent spot assay (ELISPOT), we found that infection with V. cholerae O1 and OCVs induce similar responses to the protein antigen CtxB, but responses to LPS were diminished after OCV compared to those after natural V. cholerae infection. A second dose of OCV on day 14 failed to boost circulating V. cholerae-specific plasmablast responses in Bangladeshi adults. Our results differ from those in studies from areas where cholera is not endemic, in which a second vaccination on day 14 significantly boosts plasmablast responses. Given these results, it is likely that the optimal boosting strategies for OCVs differ significantly between areas where V. cholerae infection is endemic and those where it is not.  相似文献   

3.
Vibrio cholerae O1 causes cholera, a dehydrating diarrheal disease. We have previously shown that V. cholerae-specific memory B cell responses develop after cholera infection, and we hypothesize that these mediate long-term protective immunity against cholera. We prospectively followed household contacts of cholera patients to determine whether the presence of circulating V. cholerae O1 antigen-specific memory B cells on enrollment was associated with protection against V. cholerae infection over a 30-day period. Two hundred thirty-six household contacts of 122 index patients with cholera were enrolled. The presence of lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-specific IgG memory B cells in peripheral blood on study entry was associated with a 68% decrease in the risk of infection in household contacts (P = 0.032). No protection was associated with cholera toxin B subunit (CtxB)-specific memory B cells or IgA memory B cells specific to LPS. These results suggest that LPS-specific IgG memory B cells may be important in protection against infection with V. cholerae O1.  相似文献   

4.
Vibrio cholerae O1 can cause severe watery diarrhea that can be life-threatening without treatment. Infection results in long-lasting protection against subsequent disease. Development of memory B cells of the immunoglobulin G (IgG) and IgA isotypes to V. cholerae O1 antigens, including serotype-specific lipopolysaccharide (LPS) and the B subunit of cholera toxin (CTB), after cholera infection has been demonstrated. Memory B cells of the IgM isotype may play a role in long-term protection, particularly against T-cell-independent antigens, but IgM memory has not been studied in V. cholerae O1 infection. Therefore, we assayed acute- and convalescent-phase blood samples from cholera patients for the presence of memory B cells that produce cholera antigen-specific IgM antibody upon polyclonal stimulation in in vitro culture. We also examined the development of serological and antibody-secreting cell responses following infection. Subjects developed significant IgM memory responses by day 30 after infection, both to the T-cell-independent antigen LPS and to the T-cell-dependent antigen CTB. No significant corresponding elevations in plasma IgM antibodies or circulating IgM antibody-secreting cells to CTB were detected. In 17 subjects followed to day 90 after infection, significant persistence of elevated IgM memory responses was not observed. The IgM memory response to CTB was negatively correlated with the IgG plasma antibody response to CTB, and there was a trend toward negative correlation between the IgM memory and IgA plasma antibody responses to LPS. We did not observe an association between the IgM memory response to LPS and the vibriocidal titer.Vibrio cholerae continues to be a significant global health burden as a cause of severe secretory diarrhea, resulting in an estimated three to five million annual cases, with more than 100,000 deaths from rapid dehydration (47); cholera has recently become endemic in new regions (44, 45). V. cholerae is a noninvasive pathogen that colonizes the mucosal surface of the small intestine. Strains can be distinguished serologically by the O antigen of the lipopolysaccharide (LPS); V. cholerae O1 is the most common cause of cholera in South Asia as well as globally. The O1 serogroup has two major biotypes, El Tor and classical, and two major serotypes, Inaba and Ogawa (35). Natural infection with V. cholerae O1 El Tor induces protective immunity that lasts for at least 3 to 10 years in both areas where cholera is not endemic and areas where it is endemic (21). It remains unknown, however, what aspects of the adaptive immune response to cholera confer this long-term protection.V. cholerae-infected patients mount immunologic responses to both protein and polysaccharide antigens, including rises in both serum immunoglobulin G (IgG) and IgA antibodies (14). A number of these serological responses have been shown to correlate with protection against reinfection; these include the complement-dependent serum vibriocidal antibody (14) and IgA (but not IgG) responses to LPS, cholera toxin B subunit (CTB), and toxin coregulated pilus A (TcpA) (17). These serological responses, however, are short-lived (4, 32), and the association of the vibriocidal titer with protection is not absolute (36), suggesting that these responses may reflect protection from more recent exposure but that other immunologic mechanisms mediate longer-term protection. In addition to serological responses, development of mucosal immune responses to intestinal antigens can be detected in the blood, when B cells activated by antigen in the gut-associated lymphoid tissues circulate transiently in the blood as antibody-secreting cells (ASCs), before homing back to intestinal mucosal surfaces (11, 26). Circulation of ASCs specific to both LPS and CTB is seen after cholera infection, peaking around the seventh day after infection and declining by day 11 (32).Responses of the IgM isotype to cholera antigens have been less thoroughly investigated than the IgG and IgA responses. However, IgM defenses may be an important component of the overall immunologic response to cholera, since vibriocidal antibodies are principally of the IgM isotype (22) and IgM levels of pooled convalescent-phase serum samples correspond closely with vibriocidal activity (24), which in turn correlates with immunity (14). The pentameric structure of IgM facilitates strong cross-linking of antigens and activation of complement in the defense against other gram-negative enteric bacteria (2).We have recently shown development of memory B cells of both the IgG and IgA isotypes to LPS, CTB, and TcpA; these cells persisted in the circulation beyond 1 year for the protein antigens CTB and TcpA, but were not measurably above baseline levels by 9 to 12 months after infection for the polysaccharide-containing antigen LPS (16, 18). These circulating memory B cells can be detected by ex vivo polyclonal stimulation of peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs); stimulated memory B cells mature into ASCs detectable by enzyme-linked immunospot (ELISPOT) assay. Alternatively, memory B-cell responses can be detected by measuring antigen-specific antibodies secreted by maturing ASCs during the ex vivo stimulation of PBMCs in the memory B-cell assay (18).Memory B cells relevant for cholera immunity may include IgM+ as well as switched-memory (IgA+ and IgG+) populations. The majority of circulating IgM+ cells are naïve B cells, but some IgM+ cells bear the memory cell marker CD27+, and recent evidence suggests that these IgM+CD27+ cells are true memory B cells whose immunoglobulin variable region genes have undergone somatic hypermutation in response to antigen in early-stage germinal centers (39). IgM+ memory cells can undergo isotype switching to produce IgG, IgA, or IgE antibody, but they also have a role in producing rapid, high-affinity IgM antibody responses to acute infection (19, 37, 46). In this study, we have measured the development of memory B-cell responses of the IgA, IgG, and IgM isotypes to both a protein (CTB) and a nonprotein (LPS) antigen, and we compared these memory responses with other immunologic responses in patients after V. cholerae infection in Bangladesh.  相似文献   

5.
The avidity of antibodies to specific antigens and the relationship of avidity to memory B cell responses to these antigens have not been studied in patients with cholera or those receiving oral cholera vaccines. We measured the avidity of antibodies to cholera toxin B subunit (CTB) and Vibrio cholerae O1 lipopolysaccharide (LPS) in Bangladeshi adult cholera patients (n = 30), as well as vaccinees (n = 30) after administration of two doses of a killed oral cholera vaccine. We assessed antibody and memory B cell responses at the acute stage in patients or prior to vaccination in vaccinees and then in follow-up over a year. Both patients and vaccinees mounted CTB-specific IgG and IgA antibodies of high avidity. Patients showed longer persistence of these antibodies than vaccinees, with persistence lasting in patients up to day 270 to 360. The avidity of LPS-specific IgG and IgA antibodies in patients remained elevated up to 180 days of follow-up. Vaccinees mounted highly avid LPS-specific antibodies at day 17 (3 days after the second dose of vaccine), but the avidity waned rapidly to baseline by 30 days. We examined the correlation between antigen-specific memory B cell responses and avidity indices for both antigens. We found that numbers of CTB- and LPS-specific memory B cells significantly correlated with the avidity indices of the corresponding antibodies (P < 0.05; Spearman''s ρ = 0.28 to 0.45). These findings suggest that antibody avidity after infection and immunization is a good correlate of the development and maintenance of memory B cell responses to Vibrio cholerae O1 antigens.  相似文献   

6.
Cholera caused by Vibrio cholerae O1 confers at least 3 to 10 years of protection against subsequent disease regardless of age, despite a relatively rapid fall in antibody levels in peripheral blood, suggesting that memory B cell responses may play an important role in protection. The V. cholerae O1-specific polysaccharide (OSP) component of lipopolysaccharide (LPS) is responsible for serogroup specificity, and it is unclear if young children are capable of developing memory B cell responses against OSP, a T cell-independent antigen, following cholera. To address this, we assessed OSP-specific memory B cell responses in young children (2 to 5 years, n = 11), older children (6 to 17 years, n = 21), and adults (18 to 55 years, n = 28) with cholera caused by V. cholerae O1 in Dhaka, Bangladesh. We also assessed memory B cell responses against LPS and vibriocidal responses, and plasma antibody responses against OSP, LPS, and cholera toxin B subunit (CtxB; a T cell-dependent antigen) on days 2 and 7, as well as days 30, 90, and 180 after convalescence. In all age cohorts, vibriocidal responses and plasma OSP, LPS, and CtxB-specific responses peaked on day 7 and fell toward baseline over the follow-up period. In comparison, we were able to detect OSP memory B cell responses in all age cohorts of patients with detectable responses over baseline for 90 to 180 days. Our results suggest that OSP-specific memory B cell responses can occur following cholera, even in the youngest children, and may explain in part the age-independent induction of long-term immunity following naturally acquired disease.  相似文献   

7.
We determined the types of cholera toxin (CT) produced by a collection of 185 Vibrio cholerae O1 strains isolated in Bangladesh over the past 45 years. All of the El Tor strains of V. cholerae O1 isolated since 2001 produced CT of the classical biotype, while those isolated before 2001 produced CT of the El Tor biotype.  相似文献   

8.
Considerable effort is being made to understand the acute and memory antibody responses in natural cholera infection, while rather less is known about the roles of cellular immune responses involving T and B lymphocytes. We studied responses in adult patients hospitalized with cholera caused by Vibrio cholerae O1. Peripheral blood mononuclear cells from patients (n = 15) were analyzed by flow cytometry after stimulation with V. cholerae O1 membrane protein (MP) or toxin-coregulated pilus antigen (TcpA). The gamma interferon (IFN-γ) and interleukin-13 (IL-13) responses in stimulated-lymphocyte supernatants were studied. The responses were compared with those of healthy controls (n = 10). Patients responded with increased frequencies of gut-homing CD4+ T cells (CD4+ β7+), gut-homing CD8+ T cells (CD8+ β7+), and gut-homing B cells (CD19+ β7+) at the early and/or late convalescent stages compared to the acute stage. After stimulation with MP or TcpA, proliferation of CD4+ and CD8+ T cells was increased at the acute stage and/or early convalescent stage compared to healthy controls. Increased IL-13 and IFN-γ responses were observed after antigenic stimulation at the acute and convalescent stages compared to healthy controls. Thus, increases in the levels of gut-homing T and B cells, as well as involvement of CD8 and CD4 Th1-mediated (IFN-γ) and CD4 Th2-mediated (IL-13) cytokine responses, take place in acute dehydrating disease caused by V. cholerae O1. Further studies are needed to determine if such responses are also stimulated after immunization with oral cholera vaccines and if these responses play a role in protection following exposure to cholera.Vibrio cholerae O1 is a common causative agent of acute watery diarrhea in children and adults in the developing world (1, 3, 10, 19). After colonizing the proximal small intestine, this bacterium produces cholera toxin, which induces a profuse secretory diarrhea. Cholera remains a key public health problem that results in epidemics in resource-poor settings.It is believed that the immune response to cholera is initiated by antigen presentation in the Peyer''s patches of the gastrointestinal mucosa, followed by migration of the stimulated antigen-specific B cells to regional lymph nodes and differentiation of these cells into specific antibody-secreting cells (28). Stimulation of the common mucosal immune system leads to production of both local and systemic antibodies (2, 15, 27) to virulence antigens of V. cholerae (25, 28).Natural cholera infection is believed to give rise to long-term protection against subsequent disease. Robust systemic and mucosal antibodies are produced to the V. cholerae lipopolysaccharide, to cholera toxin, and to colonization factors, including the major subunit of the toxin-coregulated pilus, TcpA (2, 24, 25, 28). We have recently shown that there is induction of memory B-cell responses following infection, which may play a role in longer-lasting protection (14). In addition, recent evidence suggests that an innate component of the immune system may also play a role in the host response to cholera (9, 22, 26). Studies with experimental animals have shown that the mucosal immune response to cholera toxin is T cell dependent and that CD4 T helper cells have an important role (7, 12, 13). However, not much is known about the role of the adaptive cellular immune responses in patients with cholera. The aim of the present study was to decipher the role of T- and B-cell-mediated immune responses in natural cholera infection in adults hospitalized with dehydrating illness, who were followed from the acute stage to convalescence.  相似文献   

9.
The serine/threonine kinase mammalian/mechanistic target of rapamycin (mTOR) integrates various environmental cues such as the presence of antigen, inflammation, and nutrients to regulate T cell growth, metabolism, and function. The tuberous sclerosis 1 (TSC1)/TSC2 complex negatively regulates the activity of an mTOR-containing multiprotein complex called mTOR complex 1. Recent studies have revealed an essential cell-intrinsic role for TSC1 in T cell survival, quiescence, and mitochondrial homeostasis. Given the emerging role of mTOR activity in the regulation of the quantity and quality of CD8 T cell responses, in this study, we examine the role of its suppressor, TSC1, in the regulation of antigen-specific primary and memory CD8 T cell responses to bacterial infection. Using an established model system of transgenic CD8 cell adoptive transfer and challenge with Listeria monocytogenes expressing a cognate antigen, we found that TSC1 deficiency impairs antigen-specific CD8 T cell responses, resulting in weak expansion, exaggerated contraction, and poor memory generation. Poor expansion of TSC1-deficient cells was associated with defects in survival and proliferation in vivo, while enhanced contraction was correlated with an increased ratio of short-lived effectors to memory precursors in the effector cell population. This perturbation of effector-memory differentiation was concomitant with decreased expression of eomesodermin among activated TSC1 knockout cells. Upon competitive adoptive transfer with wild-type counterparts and antigen rechallenge, TSC1-deficient memory cells showed moderate defects in expansion but not cytokine production. Taken together, these findings provide direct evidence of a CD8 T cell-intrinsic role for TSC1 in the regulation of antigen-specific primary and memory responses.  相似文献   

10.
Vibrio cholerae non-serogroup O1 cystitis.   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
We report a case of a patient who developed cystitis caused by non-serogroup O1 Vibrio cholerae after swimming in the Chesapeake Bay. Treatment was empirical, with complete symptomatic resolution. Genitourinary tract infections by Vibrio spp. are uncommon but should be considered when cystitis occurs after saltwater exposure in appropriate geographic regions.  相似文献   

11.
Biological and serological analyses of 272 isolates of Vibrio cholerae O1 from six epidemics and from a few sporadic cases in Kenya were carried out. All of the isolates were identified as V. cholerae biotype E1 Tor, and 210 out of 272 isolates were hemolytic as examined by Feeley's method.  相似文献   

12.
Strains of Vibrio cholerae serogroup O1 biotype El Tor that are susceptible to Mukerjee cholera bacteriophage group IV (S. Mukerjee, Bull. W.H.O. 28:333-336, 1963) were found. Cholera vibrios isolated from epidemics in northeast Thailand were characterized, and 57 of 60 strains isolated in 1986 were susceptible to cholera phage IV. However, all 113 strains isolated in 1988 were not susceptible to the phage. All isolates in both epidemics revealed behaviors typical of El Tor vibrios, except phage IV susceptibility in the 57 strains. Although the plaques of phage IV were generally translucent, plaques on some isolates looked transparent, just like those on classical vibrios. The organisms grown in the plaques were lysogenized. If this kind of strain is frequently isolated, the biotype of V. cholerae O1 should be reconsidered.  相似文献   

13.
The emergence of Vibrio cholerae O139 Bengal in 1993, its rapid spread in an epidemic form, in which it replaced existing strains of V. cholerae O1 during 1992 and 1993, and the subsequent reemergence of V. cholerae O1 of the El Tor biotype in Bangladesh since 1994 have raised questions regarding the origin of the reemerged El Tor vibrios. We studied 50 El Tor vibrio strains isolated in Bangladesh and four other countries in Asia and Africa before the emergence of V. cholerae O139 and 32 strains isolated in Bangladesh during and after the epidemic caused by V. cholerae O139 and 32 strains isolated in Bangladesh during and after the epidemic caused by V. cholerae O139 to determine whether the reemerged El Tor vibrios were genetically different from the El Tor vibrios which existed before the emergence of V. cholerae O139. Analysis of restriction fragment length polymorphisms in genes for conserved rRNA, cholera toxin (ctxA), and zonula occludens toxin (zot) or in DNA sequences flanking the genes showed that the El Tor strains isolated before the emergence of V. cholerae O139 belonged to four different ribotypes and four different ctx genotypes. Of 32 El Tor strains isolated after the emergence of O139 vibrios, 30 strains (93.7%) including all the clinical isolates belonged to a single new ribotype and a distinctly different ctx genotype. These results provide evidence that the reemerged El Tor strains represent a new clone of El Tor vibrios distinctly different from the earlier clones of El Tor vibrios which were replaced by the O139 vibrios. Further analysis showed that all the strains carried the structural and regulatory genes for toxin-coregulated pilus (tcpA, tcpI, and toxR). All strains of the new clone produced cholera toxin (CT) in vitro, as assayed by the GM1-dependent enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay, and the level of CT production was comparable to that of previous epidemic isolates of El Tor vibrios. Further studies are required to assess the epidemic potential of the newly emerged clone of V. cholerae O1 and to understand the mechanism of emergence of new clones of toxigenic V. cholerae.  相似文献   

14.
Eighteen monoclonal antibodies were generated from mice immunized with Vibrio cholerae O1 serotype Inaba. Reactivities of these antibodies were investigated by slide agglutination, microdilution agglutination, and passive hemagglutination tests. Although all antibodies reacted to the Inaba-type cells, reactivity to Ogawa cells showed some variation. These antibodies were roughly subdivided into three groups by slide agglutination tests and microdilution agglutination tests by using type-specific standard strains. The first group showed almost identical reactivities to both the Ogawa- and the Inaba-type cells, while the second group reacted to Inaba-type cells but only very weakly reacted to Ogawa-type cells. The third group reacted only to Inaba-type cells; no agglutination was observed for Ogawa-type cells in either the slide agglutination or the microdilution agglutination tests. Most of the third group showed cross-reactivity to Brucella abortus and Yersinia enterocolitica O9. Results of passive hemagglutination tests showed that all 18 antibodies were to the lipopolysaccharide of V. cholerae O1.  相似文献   

15.
Biotype-specific probe for Vibrio cholerae serogroup O1.   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
The O1 serogroup of Vibrio cholerae can be divided into two biotypes, El Tor and Classical. Current tests to distinguish between these biotypes are often difficult to interpret. On the basis of the difference in sequence of the hlyA gene in these biotypes, we have developed a simple probe that can easily and reliably differentiate between the two biotypes.  相似文献   

16.
Vibrio cholerae infection is a rare but well-documented cause of laboratory-associated illness. We report on the first case of indigenous cholera documented in Austria after more than fifty years. In April 2008, the National Reference Centre for V. cholerae received an isolate of V. cholerae O1, serotype Ogawa, cultured from the stool specimen of a patient consulting a general practitioner because of watery diarrhea. The 23 year old microbiology student had been working with viable V. cholerae for 4 weeks in a practical laboratory course. Two days before onset of symptoms an open 300 mL Erlenmeyer flask with approx. 30 mL of overnight V. cholerae culture tipped over and spilled into a laboratory shaker near the student's working place. Wearing gloves and protective gowns, the student and her supervisor immediately cleaned and decontaminated the shaker. As a consequence of this laboratory incident, the institution in question replaced the clamp-less shaker plate by a traditional shaker plate with mechanical clamps.  相似文献   

17.
Vibrio cholerae serogroup O139, now considered to be the second organism capable of causing epidemic severe dehydrating cholera, contains a capsular polysaccharide which makes it difficult for it to be used in the conventional vibriocidal antibody assay optimized for V. cholerae O1. After modification of the procedure, which involved the use of specific bacterial strains, a lower bacterial inoculum, and increased amounts of complement, the vibriocidal antibody responses to V. cholerae O139 were measured in acute- and convalescent-phase sera from 33 V. cholerae O139-infected and 18 V. cholerae O1-infected patients and in single serum samples from 20 healthy control subjects. The responses in these individuals to V. cholerae O1 strains were also determined. Significant elevations in the homologous antibody response were found only in the convalescent-phase sera from both groups of patients with cholera. These findings may explain the basis for the lack of heterologous protection between the two serogroups of V. cholerae. Healthy controls had higher background levels of vibriocidal antibody to V. cholerae O1 than to V. cholerae O139.  相似文献   

18.
Protease and soluble hemagglutinating activities produced by a non-O1 Vibrio cholerae strain isolated from a patient with diarrhea were compared with similar activities produced by V. cholerae O1. The soluble protease activities were indistinguishable in heat stability, immunodiffusion, inhibition by antiserum, and electrophoretic analysis. On the other hand, the soluble hemagglutinating activities of both strains were not completely identical. The hemagglutinating activity of the non-O1 V. cholerae strain was not inhibited by Zincov; it was more sensitive to inhibition by normal serum, and it had an unusual pattern of heat stability. Heating at 100 degrees C resulted in some recovery of activity of a sample previously inactivated by heating at 60 degrees C.  相似文献   

19.
Vibrio cholerae O139 Bengal, although closely related to V. cholerae O1 El Tor, produces a polysaccharide capsule and has a distinct O antigen. We have identified a chromosomal region of at least 11 kb, as defined by three TnphoA mutations, that is required for the expression of both polysaccharides. Electron microscopy and sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis show that these TnphoA mutants have lost the abilities both to express capsule and to produce lipopolysaccharide beyond the core oligosaccharide. Reactivity with O139 typing serum and resistance to serum are also lost in the mutants. DNA probes for this region do not hybridize with O1 V. cholerae but do react with other vibrios, implying that the region was recently acquired.  相似文献   

20.
Immunity against Vibrio cholerae O1 is serogroup specific, and serogrouping is defined by the O-specific polysaccharide (OSP) part of lipopolysaccharide (LPS). Despite this, human immune responses to V. cholerae OSP have not previously been characterized. We assessed immune responses against V. cholerae OSP in adults with cholera caused by V. cholerae O1 El Tor serotype Inaba or Ogawa in Dhaka, Bangladesh, using O1 OSP-core–bovine serum albumin (OSPc:BSA) conjugates; responses targeted OSP in these conjugates. Responses of Inaba-infected patients to Inaba OSP and LPS increased significantly in IgG, IgM, and IgA isotypes from the acute to convalescent phases of illness, and the responses correlated well between OSP and LPS (R = 0.86, 0.73, and 0.91, respectively; P < 0.01). Plasma IgG, IgM, and IgA responses to Ogawa OSP and LPS in Ogawa-infected patients also correlated well with each other (R = 0.60, 0.60, and 0.92, respectively; P < 0.01). Plasma IgM responses to Inaba OSP and Ogawa OSP correlated with the respective serogroup-specific vibriocidal antibodies (R = 0.80 and 0.66, respectively; P < 0.001). Addition of either OSPc:BSA or LPS, but not BSA, to vibriocidal assays inhibited vibriocidal responses in a comparable and concentration-dependent manner. Mucosal IgA immune responses to OSP and LPS were also similar. Our study is the first to characterize anti-OSP immune responses in patients with cholera and suggests that responses targeting V. cholerae LPS, including vibriocidal responses that correlate with protection against cholera, predominantly target OSP. Induction of anti-OSP responses may be associated with protection against cholera, and our results may support the development of a vaccine targeting V. cholerae OSP.  相似文献   

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