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Volume 19, Number 10—October 2013
Letter

Vibrio cholerae O1 El Tor and O139 Bengal Strains Carrying ctxBET, Bangladesh

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To the Editor. Cholera, caused by Vibrio cholerae, continues to affect millions of persons in disease-endemic areas where safe drinking water is scarce and sanitation is poor. Of 7 cholera pandemics recorded since 1817, V. cholerae serogroup O1 classical (CL) biotype was associated with the sixth, whereas the seventh (ongoing) pandemic was initiated by V. cholerae O1 biotype El Tor (ET), which displaced CL in the early 1960s (1). During 1992–1993, a V. cholerae non-O1 serogroup, designated V. cholerae O139 synonym Bengal, initiated cholera epidemics in India and Bangladesh by transiently displacing V. cholerae O1 ET biotype (2). V. cholerae O139 was less frequently associated with cholera in Bangladesh than V. cholerae ET in 1994 and the years following, until 2005 (3); it has been undetected since then. Meanwhile, V. cholerae ET has shown genetic changes since 2001, and isolates carry the ctxB gene of the CL biotype (ctxBCL) in Bangladesh (4). Although the genetic transition from ctxBET to ctxBCL was observed during 1998–1999 for V. cholerae O139 (5), V. cholerae strains carrying ctxBET were considered extinct, i.e., undetected for about a decade.

During June 2010–December 2012, the International Centre for Diarrheal Disease Research, Bangladesh (ICDDR,B) systematically conducted ongoing epidemiologic ecologic surveillance in Dhaka, Chhatak, and Mathbaria and isolated V. cholerae strains (n = 500 [clinical/environmental]: Dhaka [n = 110/94], Mathbaria [n = 90/79], Chhatak [n = 111/16]). Of the 500 V. cholerae isolates, 496 were confirmed as O1 and 4 as O139 Bengal, on the basis of serologic, phenotypic, and genetic properties (3,68). All V. cholerae O1 and O139 isolates were positive for ctxA, tlc, ace, and zot and possessed ET biotype–specific markers tcpAET, hlyAET, and rtxC. Mismatch amplification mutation assay–PCR (9) demonstrated ctxBCL allele in 492 V. cholerae O1 ET strains (altered ET), whereas ctxBET was found in 8 isolates (4 V. cholerae O1 ET and 4 V. cholerae O139).

Nucleotide sequencing of ctxB showed that the translated sequences of V. cholerae O1 and O139 strains carrying ctxBET were identical to those of the ET reference strain N16961 (GenBank accession no. NC_002505), with tyrosine and isoleucine at positions 39 and 68, respectively, as opposed to altered ET, which possesses histidine and threonine at positions 39 and 68, respectively (4). PCR additionally showed that the V. cholerae O1 and O139 Bengal strains carrying ctxBET had the ET biotype–specific RS1 element gene rstC and repressor gene rstRET, suggesting prototype ET attributes (7).

Three V. cholerae strains carrying ctxBET were first isolated in 2011 from surface water: one O1 strain and one O139 strain from Mathbaria and one O1 strain from Chhatak. In 2012, V. cholerae O1 carrying ctxBET was isolated from cholera patients in Mathbaria and Chhatak (n = 1 each). Also, 3 O139 strains carrying ctxBET were isolated from surface water in Dhaka. The confirmed V. cholerae O1 and O139 Bengal strains carrying ctxBET were of particular interest because altered ET strains carrying ctxBCL have been deemed the cause of endemic cholera in Bangladesh since 2001 (4) and globally (10).

Figure

Thumbnail of DNA fingerprinting patterns of Vibrio cholerae. Dendrogram was prepared by Dice similarity coefficient and UPGMA (unweighted pair-group method with arithmetic mean) clustering methods by using pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE) images of the NotI-digested genomic DNA. The scale bar at the top (left) indicates the correlation coefficient (range 90%–100%). V. cholerae altered ET (ctxBCL) strains (pulsotype A) formed a major cluster (cluster I), separated from prototype ET (ctxBET

Figure. . DNA fingerprinting patterns of Vibrio cholerae. Dendrogram was prepared by Dice similarity coefficient and UPGMA (unweighted pair-group method with arithmetic mean) clustering methods by using pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE) images...

V. cholerae strains carrying ctxBET were closely related to the pre-2001 V. cholerae strains carrying ctxBET, as were the O139 Bengal strains carrying ctxBET. Two lines of evidence support this close relationship. First, the antimicrobial drug resistance patterns of 3 of the V. cholerae O139 strains isolated in Dhaka during 2012 were resistant to trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole (25 µg), whereas the remaining O139 and 4 O1 strains were susceptible to all drugs tested, including azithromycin (15 µg), ciprofloxacin (5 µg), gentamicin (10 µg), ampicillin (10 µg), tetracycline (30 µg), and erythromycin (15 µg). Second, pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE) of NotI-digested genomic DNA showed identical banding patterns for the 4 V. cholerae O1 strains carrying ctxBET and the pre-2001 ET strains, including N16961, and the DNA pattern differed from that of the altered ET associated with endemic cholera in Bangladesh (Figure). All 4 V. cholerae O139 strains had typical O139 Bengal banding patterns, shown by PFGE, except that 1 strain had an extra band (Figure). Comparison of PFGE patterns with those of previously isolated V. cholerae O139 strains (1993–2005) showed that recently isolated strains (2011–2012) belonged to 1 of the ancient clones, suggesting that the strain has been present in Bangladesh since 1993 (Figure).

In conclusion, we provide evidence of the coexistence of V. cholerae O1 and O139 strains, which shows that strains carrying ctxBET, not isolated for approximately a decade in Bangladesh, have again been isolated (3). Although the epidemiologic importance of the observed genetic change in the ctxB is yet to be understood, the finding of V. cholerae strains carrying ctxBET in surface water of Bangladesh in 2011 and in association the following year with cholera may be yet another turning point, considering that the global pattern of cholera is changing rapidly.

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Acknowledgment

This study was supported in part by National Institute of Health grant no. RO1A1039129 (under collaborative agreements between the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health and ICDDR,B) and National Institute of Infectious Diseases, Japan. ICDDR,B acknowledges with gratitude the commitment of the National Institutes of Health and the National Institute of Infectious Diseases to its research efforts.

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Shah M. Rashed, Anwarul Iqbal, Shahnewaj B. Mannan, Tarequl Islam, Mahamud-ur Rashid, Fatema-tuz Johura, Haruo Watanabe, Nur A. Hasan, Anwar Huq, O. Colin Stine, R. Bradley Sack, Rita R. Colwell, and Munirul AlamComments to Author 
Author affiliations: International Center for Diarrhoeal Disease Research, Bangladesh (ICDDR,B), Dhaka, Bangladesh (S.M. Rashed, A. Iqbal, S.B. Manna, T. Islam, M.-u. Rashid, F.-t. Johura, M. Alam); National Institute of Infectious Diseases, Tokyo, Japan (H. Watanabe); University of Maryland College Park, Maryland, USA (N.A. Hasan, A. Huq, R.R. Colwell); University of Maryland Baltimore, Maryland, USA (C. Stine); Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Maryland, USA (R.B. Sack, R.R. Colwell).

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DOI: 10.3201/eid1910.130626

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Munirul Alam, ICDDR,B, GPO Box 128, Dhaka 1000, Bangladesh

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Page created: September 17, 2013
Page updated: September 17, 2013
Page reviewed: September 17, 2013
The conclusions, findings, and opinions expressed by authors contributing to this journal do not necessarily reflect the official position of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, the Public Health Service, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, or the authors' affiliated institutions. Use of trade names is for identification only and does not imply endorsement by any of the groups named above.
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