Search results for "Vibrio infections"

showing 10 items of 54 documents

Transmission to Eels, Portals of Entry, and Putative Reservoirs of Vibrio vulnificus Serovar E (Biotype 2)

2001

ABSTRACT Vibrio vulnificus serovar E (formerly biotype 2) is the etiologic agent that is responsible for the main infectious disease affecting farmed eels. Although the pathogen can theoretically use water as a vehicle for disease transmission, it has not been isolated from tank water during epizootics to date. In this work, the mode of transmission of the disease to healthy eels, the portals of entry of the pathogen into fish, and their putative reservoirs have been investigated by means of laboratory and field experiments. Results of the experiments of direct and indirect host-to-host transmission, patch contact challenges, and oral-anal intubations suggest that water is the prime vehicle…

GillsSerotypeDisease reservoirVibrio vulnificusBiologyApplied Microbiology and BiotechnologyMicrobiologyFish DiseasesVibrionaceaeVibrio InfectionsAnimalsEnvironmental Microbiology and BiodegradationPathogenDisease ReservoirsVibrioEcologyOutbreakAnguillabiology.organism_classificationVirologyVibrioBiofilmsVibrio InfectionsMicroscopy Electron ScanningWater MicrobiologyFood ScienceBiotechnologyApplied and Environmental Microbiology
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Isolation and characterization of Vibrio parahaemolyticus causing infection in Iberian toothcarp Aphanius iberus

1999

High mortality among laboratory cultured Iberian toothcarp Aphanius iberus occurred in February 1997 in Valencia (Spain). The main signs of the disease were external haemorrhage and tail rot. Bacteria isolated from internal organs of infected fish were biochemically homogeneous and identified as Vibrio parahaemolyticus. The bacteria were haemolytic against erythrocytes from eel Anguilla anguilla, amberjack Seriola dumerili, toothcarp A. iberus and humans, and were Kanagawa-phenomenon-negative. Infectivity tests showed that the virulence for A. iberus was dependent on salinity. Finally, all strains were virulent for amberjack and eel.

InfectivityVirulencebiologyVibrio parahaemolyticusAphaniusVirulenceAquacultureAquatic Sciencebiology.organism_classificationHemolysisSeriola dumeriliMicrobiologyCyprinodontiformesFish DiseasesSpainVibrionaceaeVibrio InfectionsIberusAnimalsVibrio parahaemolyticusAmberjackEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsDiseases of Aquatic Organisms
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Role of iron in the pathogenicity of Vibrio damsela for fish and mammals.

1994

The ability to obtain iron of 14 isolates of Vibrio damsela with different degrees of virulence for mice and turbot (Scophthalmus maximus) has been evaluated in artificial and natural iron-restricted environments. All strains were capable of utilizing haemoglobin (Hb) and ferric ammonium citrate (FAC) as the sole iron sources in vitro. However, only virulent V. damsela strains were able to resist the bacteriostatic and bactericidal effects of human and turbot sera, their growth being enhanced by the addition of Hb and FAC. The inhibitory effect of these sera on the growth of the non-pathogenic strain (ATCC 35083), however, was reversed by heat treatment (56 degrees C for 60 min). The role o…

IronVirulenceMicrobiologyFerric CompoundsMicrobiologyHeatingHemoglobinsMiceVibrionaceaeGeneticsmedicineAnimalsHumansMolecular BiologyCells CulturedVibrioMice Inbred BALB CbiologyStrain (chemistry)Virulencebiology.organism_classificationIn vitroScophthalmusTurbotQuaternary Ammonium CompoundsVibrio InfectionsFlatfishesFerricBacteriamedicine.drugFEMS microbiology letters
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Serum antibodies to Vibrio vulnificus biotype 3 lipopolysaccharide and susceptibility to disease caused by the homologous V. vulnificus biotype

2011

SUMMARYIn 1996 an outbreak of severe soft tissue infections caused byVibrio vulnificusunexpectedly erupted in fish consumers in Israel with relatively little morbidity in fish farmers. To test the hypothesis that recurrent exposure of fishermen to the virulent strain may have provided protection against severe or symptomatic disease, we investigated the association between the immune response toV. vulnificusbiotype 3 lipopolysaccharide (BT3 LPS) and disease susceptibility in fish farmers and fish consumers. Serum samples were tested for IgA and IgG of anti-BT3 LPS in fishermen and fish consumers who suffered fromV. vulnificusBT3 infections and their matched controls. Pre-existing levels of …

LipopolysaccharidesMaleSerumEpidemiologyVirulenceMicrobiologiaVibrio vulnificusImmunoglobulin GSerologyMicrobiologyVibrionaceaeVibrio Infectionsparasitic diseasesHumansIsraelVibrio vulnificusbiologyOutbreakMiddle Agedbiology.organism_classificationAntibodies BacterialImmunoglobulin AInfectious DiseasesCase-Control StudiesImmunoglobulin GVibrio InfectionsImmunologybiology.proteinFemaleDisease SusceptibilityAntibody
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The Fish Pathogen Vibrio vulnificus Biotype 2: Epidemiology, Phylogeny, and Virulence Factors Involved in Warm-Water Vibriosis

2015

ABSTRACT Vibrio vulnificus biotype 2 is the etiological agent of warm-water vibriosis, a disease that affects eels and other teleosts, especially in fish farms. Biotype 2 is polyphyletic and probably emerged from aquatic bacteria by acquisition of a transferable virulence plasmid that encodes resistance to innate immunity of eels and other teleosts. Interestingly, biotype 2 comprises a zoonotic clonal complex designated as serovar E that has extended worldwide. One of the most interesting virulence factors produced by serovar E is RtxA1 3 , a multifunctional protein that acts as a lethal factor for fish, an invasion factor for mice, and a survival factor outside the host. Two practically id…

Microbiology (medical)Gene Transfer HorizontalVirulence FactorsPhysiologyFish farmingBacterial ToxinsVirulenceVibrio vulnificusMicrobiologyFish DiseasesMicePlasmidReceptors TransferrinGeneticsAnimalsHumansVibrio vulnificusGenePathogenPhylogenyEelsGeneral Immunology and MicrobiologyEcologybiologyCell Biologybiology.organism_classificationImmunity InnateInfectious DiseasesVibrio InfectionsHorizontal gene transferWater MicrobiologyBacterial outer membranePlasmidsMicrobiology Spectrum
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Method for Specific Identification of the Emerging Zoonotic Pathogen Vibrio vulnificus Lineage 3 (Formerly Biotype 3).

2020

ABSTRACT Vibrio vulnificus is a zoonotic pathogen that is spreading worldwide due to global warming. Lineage 3 (L3; formerly biotype 3) includes the strains of the species with the unique ability to cause fish farm-linked outbreaks of septicemia. The L3 strains emerged recently and are particularly virulent and difficult to identify. Here, we describe a newly developed PCR method based on a comparative genomic study useful for both rapid identification and epidemiological studies of this interesting emerging group. The comparative genomic analysis also revealed the presence of a genetic duplication in the L3 strains that could be related to the unique ability of this lineage to produce sept…

Microbiology (medical)Genetics0303 health sciencesLineage (genetic)030306 microbiologyVirulenceOutbreakBacteriologyVibrio vulnificusBiologybiology.organism_classificationDisease Outbreaks03 medical and health sciencesFish DiseasesSepsisVibrio InfectionsGene duplicationAnimalsHumansComparative genomic analysisZoonotic pathogenVibrio vulnificus030304 developmental biologySpecific identificationVibrioJournal of clinical microbiology
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Comprehensive analysis of a Vibrio parahaemolyticus strain extracellular serine protease VpSP37

2015

Proteases play an important role in the field of tissue dissociation combined with regenerative medicine. During the years new sources of proteolytic enzymes have been studied including proteases from different marine organisms both eukaryotic and prokaryotic. Herein we have purified a secreted component of an isolate of Vibrio parahaemolyticus, with electrophoretic mobilities corresponding to 36 kDa, belonging to the serine proteases family. Sequencing of the N-terminus enabled the in silico identification of the whole primary structure consisting of 345 amino acid residues with a calculated molecular mass of 37.4 KDa. The purified enzyme, named VpSP37, contains a Serine protease domain be…

Models MolecularTMPRSS6Proteasesmedicine.medical_treatmentMolecular Sequence Datalcsh:MedicineBiologySettore BIO/19 - Microbiologia GeneraleSubstrate SpecificitySerine03 medical and health sciencesSettore BIO/10 - BiochimicamedicineAnimalsAmino Acid Sequencelcsh:Science030304 developmental biologySerine protease0303 health sciencesMultidisciplinaryProteaseEelsVibrio parahaemolyticuBiochemistry Genetics and Molecular Biology (all)030306 microbiologyAnimalMedicine (all)lcsh:RProteolytic enzymesEelVibrio InfectionTrypsinMolecular biology3. Good healthBiochemistryAgricultural and Biological Sciences (all)Vibrio InfectionsAmino Acid Sequence; Animals; Eels; Models Molecular; Molecular Sequence Data; Sequence Alignment; Serine Proteases; Substrate Specificity; Vibrio Infections; Vibrio parahaemolyticus; Agricultural and Biological Sciences (all); Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular Biology (all); Medicine (all)biology.proteinlcsh:QVibrio parahaemolyticusSerine ProteaseSerine ProteasesSequence AlignmentMASP1medicine.drugResearch Article
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Vibrio sinaloensis sp. nov., isolated from the spotted rose snapper, Lutjanus guttatus Steindachner, 1869.

2008

Nine bacterial strains were studied by means of rep-PCR, 16S rRNA gene sequence analysis, DNA-DNA hybridization and physiological characterization. Typing analysis by means of rep-PCR showed that all nine strains were highly homogeneous, with similarities above 94 %. The strains were isolated from the same geographical area (Mazatlan, Sinaloa state, Mexico) and the same type of host (cultured rose snapper, Lutjanus guttatus), although from different individuals and organs. Comparison of the almost-complete 16S rRNA gene sequences of five strains showed that they belonged to the genus Vibrio and are closely related to the type strains of Vibrio brasiliensis and Vibrio hepatarius, with simila…

Molecular Sequence DataBiologyMicrobiologyMicrobiologyFish DiseasesSpecies SpecificityVibrionaceaeRNA Ribosomal 16SSequence Homology Nucleic AcidAnimalsTypingMexicoEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsVibrioPhylogenetic treeNucleic Acid HybridizationGeneral MedicineRibosomal RNAbiology.organism_classification16S ribosomal RNAVibrioPerciformesPhenotypeVibrio InfectionsTaxonomy (biology)BacteriaInternational journal of systematic and evolutionary microbiology
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Identification of DNA sequences specific for Vibrio vulnificus biotype 2 strains by suppression subtractive hybridization.

2005

ABSTRACT Vibrio vulnificus can be divided into three biotypes, and only biotype 2, which is further divided into serovars, contains eel-virulent strains. We compared the genomic DNA of a biotype 2 serovar E isolate (tester) with the genomic DNAs of three biotype 1 strains by suppression subtractive hybridization and then tested the distribution of the tester-specific DNA sequences in a wide collection of bacterial strains. In this way we identified three plasmid-borne DNA sequences that were specific for biotype 2 strains irrespective of the serovar and three chromosomal DNA sequences that were specific for serovar E biotype 2 strains. These sequences have potential for use in the diagnosis…

Molecular Sequence DataVibrio vulnificusApplied Microbiology and BiotechnologyPolymerase Chain ReactionDNA sequencinglaw.inventionMicrobiologyNucleic acid thermodynamicsFish DiseasesPlasmidSpecies SpecificitylawMethodsAnimalsHumansSerotypingVibrio vulnificusPolymerase chain reactionGeneticsEelsEcologybiologyBase SequenceVirulenceNucleic acid sequenceNucleic Acid Hybridizationbiology.organism_classificationgenomic DNASuppression subtractive hybridizationVibrio InfectionsFood ScienceBiotechnologyPlasmidsApplied and environmental microbiology
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AIF-1 and RNASET2 are involved in the inflammatory response in the Mediterranean mussel Mytilus galloprovincialis following Vibrio infection

2022

Filter-feeding bivalves, such as the Mytilus species, are exposed to different types of bacteria in the surrounding waters, in particular of the Vibrio genus. Mussels lack an adaptive immune system and hemocytes can recognize pathogen-associated molecular patterns (PAMPs) via pattern recognition receptors (PRRs) to activate intracellular signaling pathways to trigger the antimicrobial effectors synthesis. Among the areas of bivalve immunity that deserve study include the role of hemocyte subpopulations. Since little information are available on immune responses at the tissue level to human pathogenic vibrios commonly detected in coastal waters involved in seafood-borne diseases, in this wor…

MytilusHemocytesTumor Suppressor ProteinsAIF-1 Bacterial challenge Cellular immunity Immunohistochemistrym M. galloprovincialis Myd88 RNASET2 TLR4RNASET2General MedicineAquatic ScienceAIF-1; Bacterial challenge; Cellular immunity; Immunohistochemistry; M. galloprovincialis; Myd88; RNASET2; TLR4Myd88ImmunohistochemistryCellular immunityToll-Like Receptor 4Bacterial challengeRibonucleasesSeafoodVibrio InfectionsMyeloid Differentiation Factor 88Environmental ChemistryAnimalsHumansTLR4M. galloprovincialisAIF-1Vibrio
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