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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, December 2004, p. 5854-5856, Vol. 42, No. 12
0095-1137/04/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JCM.42.12.5854-5856.2004
Copyright © 2004, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Diverse CTX Phages among Toxigenic Vibrio cholerae O1 and O139 Strains Isolated between 1994 and 2002 in an Area Where Cholera is Endemic in Bangladesh
Suraia Nusrin,1
G. Yeahia Khan,1
N. A. Bhuiyan,1
M. Ansaruzzaman,1
M. A. Hossain,1
Ashrafus Safa,1
Rasel Khan,1
Shah M. Faruque,1
David A. Sack,1
T. Hamabata,2
Yoshifumi Takeda,3 and
G. Balakrish Nair1*
International Centre for Diarrhoeal Disease Research, Bangladesh, Dhaka, Bangladesh,1
International Medical Research Center of Japan,2
Faculty of Human Life Sciences, Jissen Women's University, Tokyo, Japan3
Received 3 May 2004/
Returned for modification 28 June 2004/
Accepted 30 August 2004

ABSTRACT
PCR surveillance of the
rstR genes of CTX phages in
Vibrio cholerae O1 and O139 showed no relationship between the incidence of
disease and changes in the
rstR but showed variations in their
presence in O1 and O139 strains and the occurrence of multiple
types in a few strains.

TEXT
Of the 209 currently recognized serogroups of
Vibrio cholerae,
only strains belonging to serogroups O1 and O139 can cause cholera.
Two major virulence gene clusters are now known to carry key
virulence genes that are essential for the pathogenicity of
V. cholerae O1 and O139. These gene clusters include the CTX
prophage (
14), which carries the
ctxA and
ctxB genes (the genes
that encode cholera toxin [CT], which is responsible for severe
diarrhea), and the toxin-coregulated pilus (TCP) pathogenicity
island, which carries genes for the biosynthesis of the TCP,
required for colonization of the small intestinal epithelium
(
7).
The approximately 7-kb CTX
genome consists of the core and the RS2 region. The core region encodes proteins needed for the assembly and secretion of viral particles (Psh, Cep, pIIICTX, Ace, and Zot) and also encodes CT, which is not necessary for phage morphogenesis (3), while the RS2 region represents a site-specific recombination system that allows lysogenic phage to integrate at a specific site on the host chromosome (14). The RS2 region of CTX prophage encodes proteins required for replication (RstA), phage integration (RstB), and regulation (RstR) of the lysogeny of CTX
(14). An antirepressor, rstC, is carried by a satellite phage, RS1, often present adjacent to the CTX prophage in toxigenic V. cholerae O1 El Tor and O139 strains (1, 5).
Diversity of the CTX phage repressor rstR has been described previously, and this diversity constitutes heteroimmunity among diverse CTX phages (8, 2). The difference in the rstR gene is also the only known genetic difference between any two different CTX phage types. The existence of at least four different rstR genes carried by different CTX phages, namely, CTXET, CTXclass, CTXCalc, and CTXEnv, has been recognized (8, 2, 10). The epidemiological significance of the diversity of CTX phages is not clearly known, but at least two periods of explosive resurgence of cholera have been associated with strains showing changes in the rstR type of CTX phages. The first was the resurgence of V. cholerae O139 in August 1996 in Calcutta, India, which continued for a year (8, 9, 13), and the second was the resurgence of strain O139 in March to April of 2002 in Dhaka, Bangladesh (6). On the basis of their rstR genes and other phenotypic traits, genetic hybrids of classical and El Tor biotypes that cause cholera have been shown to exist, and these hybrids have been designated the Matlab variants of V. cholerae (11). To further document the distribution and temporal changes in the CTX phage contents of epidemic strains, we conducted a surveillance of CTX phage types by analyzing the types of rstR genes carried by a large collection of toxigenic V. cholerae strains.
We selected every 10th consecutive strain of V. cholerae O1 or O139 isolated from cholera patients admitted to the Matlab hospital, 50 km south of Dhaka, Bangladesh, from 1994 to 2002. A total of 169 strains of V. cholerae O1 and 95 strains of V. cholerae O139 isolated between 1994 and 2002 (with the exception of the year 1999) were included in this study. The procedure for the selective isolation of V. cholerae from stool samples of patients with acute secretory diarrhea and subsequent identification has been described in detail previously (12).
The serogroup of the strains selected were confirmed by using polyclonal O1 and O139 antisera. PCR was performed according to a previously described procedure (11). The primer sequences are shown in Table 1. V. cholerae O1 isolates (classical 154) and V. cholerae O139 (AR-196318) and V. cholerae non-O1 non-O139 (environmental SCE-188) isolates (10) were used as standard reference strains. We also used an rstC probe as described previously (4) to examine whether CTX prophage-negative strains, which show an rstR amplicon, carried RS1. The PCR products from five representative isolates (MJ1347, MM1079, MM2071, MP1950, and MP2044) were purified with a Microcon centrifugal filter device (Millipore Corporation, Bedford, Mass.), and a cycle sequencing reaction was performed with the same primers. DNA sequencing was performed by using standard conditions in an ABI PRISM 310 automated sequencer (Perkin-Elmer-Applied Biosystems, Foster City, Calif.). DNA sequence editing and analysis were performed with DNASTAR package 5.06 software.
Table
2 shows the distribution of different types of
rstR genes
among 169 strains of
V. cholerae O1 and 95 O139 strains, isolated
between 1994 and 2002 from hospitalized patients in Matlab,
Bangladesh. We propose to designate the
rstR genes with subscript
numbers (
rstR1,
rstR2., etc.) since we anticipate that the number
of such
rstR genes that will be discovered in the future is
likely to increase and thus a number designation is more suitable.
The nucleotide sequences of 10
rstR amplicons from five isolates
of
V. cholerae O1 and O139 were similar to those of canonical
rstR genes, with minor differences, as shown in Table
3.
View this table:
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TABLE 3. Nucleotide sequences of various rstR genes of V. cholerae O1 and O139 isolates from Matlab, Bangladesh, in comparison with corresponding sequences in GenBank
|
Of the 169 O1 strains and 95 O139 strains, 9 and 2 strains,
respectively, did not carry the
ctxA gene and were considered
nontoxigenic. Two of the nontoxigenic strains of
V. cholerae O1, however, carried the
rstR2 genes. We further examined all
nine
V. cholerae O1 and two
V. cholerae O139 strains with a
probe specific for
rstC to search for the presence of the RS1
element, which would explain the presence of the
rstR2 gene
in the nontoxigenic
V. cholerae O1 strains. However, only one
of the two nontoxigenic
V. cholerae O1 strains hybridized with
the
rstC probe; the other strain did not hybridize with the
probe.
Three isolates from the year 1997 are of special interest. One of the isolates, MM004, is like the CTX-negative isolates of previous years, in that it was negative for an rstR gene of any type, ctxA, and rstC. The isolate MM1079, however, was positive for rstR2 but negative for the ctxA gene and positive for rstC. Yet another 1997 isolate, MM2644, was rstR2 positive but negative for both the ctxA and rstC genes. These strains might have undergone deletion in part of the CTX prophage. Overall, PCR results for the incidence of different rstR types in O1 and O139 strains showed no relationship between the temporal incidence of the disease and changes in CTX. However, the data presented do indicate variation in the incidence of rstR types, their presence in O1 and O139 strains, and the infrequent but interesting occurrence of multiple types in some strains. The rstR gene offers a window to assess the evolution of the phage.
Nucleotide sequence accession numbers.
The nucleotide sequence accession numbers of 10 rstR amplicons from five isolates of V. cholerae O1 and O139 have been submitted to GenBank under accession numbers AY704650 to AY704659.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
This research was supported by funds from the United States
Japan Cooperative Medical Science Program, Asian Region Collaboration
Research Project 2002, and other core donors of the Centre who
share its concern for the health problems of developing countries.

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Laboratory Sciences Division, ICDDR,B Centre for Health and Population Research, Mohakhali, Dhaka-1212, Bangladesh. Phone: 880-2-9886464. Fax: 880-2-8823116. E-mail:
gbnair{at}icddrb.org.


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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, December 2004, p. 5854-5856, Vol. 42, No. 12
0095-1137/04/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JCM.42.12.5854-5856.2004
Copyright © 2004, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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