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Journal ArticleOpen Access

Transmissibility of cholera: <i>In vivo</i> -formed biofilms and their relationship to infectivity and persistence in the environment

Author Affiliations
International Centre for Diarrhoeal Disease Research, Harvard University
Published InProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Year2006
Citations335

Abstract

The factors that enhance the waterborne spread of bacterial epidemics and sustain the epidemic strain in nature are unclear. Although the epidemic diarrheal disease cholera is known to be transmitted by water contaminated with pathogenic Vibrio cholerae, routine isolation of pathogenic strains from aquatic environments is challenging. Here, we show that conditionally viable environmental cells (CVEC) of pathogenic V. cholerae that resist cultivation by conventional techniques exist in surface water as aggregates (biofilms) of partially dormant cells. Such CVEC can be recovered as fully virulent bacteria by inoculating the water into rabbit intestines. Furthermore, when V. cholerae shed in stools of cholera patients are inoculated in environmental water samples in the laboratory, the cells exhibit characteristics similar to CVEC, suggesting…
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