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Wastewater-based surveillance of Vibrio cholerae: Molecular insights on biofilm regulatory diguanylate cyclases, virulence factors and antibiotic resistance patterns

Vibrio cholerae is an inherent inhabitant of aquatic ecosystems. The Indian state of West Bengal, especially the Gangetic delta region is the highest cholera affected region and is considered as the hub of Asiatic cholera. V. cholerae were isolated from publicly accessible wastewater of Midnapore, W...

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Published in:Microbial pathogenesis 2024-11, Vol.196, p.106995, Article 106995
Main Authors: Manna, Tuhin, Chandra Guchhait, Kartik, Jana, Debarati, Dey, Subhamoy, Karmakar, Monalisha, Hazra, Subrata, Manna, Mousumi, Jana, Pradip, Panda, Amiya Kumar, Ghosh, Chandradipa
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Language:English
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Summary:Vibrio cholerae is an inherent inhabitant of aquatic ecosystems. The Indian state of West Bengal, especially the Gangetic delta region is the highest cholera affected region and is considered as the hub of Asiatic cholera. V. cholerae were isolated from publicly accessible wastewater of Midnapore, West Bengal, India. Serotyping determined all isolates to be of non-O1/non-O139 serogroups. Moderate biofilm-forming abilities were noticed in most of the isolates (74.7 %) while, high biofilm formation was recorded for only 6.3 % isolates and 19 % of isolates exhibited low/non-biofilm-forming abilities. PCR-based screening of crucial diguanylate cyclases (DGCs) involved in cyclic-di-GMP-mediated biofilm signaling was performed. cdgH and cdgM were the most abundant DGCs among 93.7 % and 91.5 % of isolates, respectively. Other important DGCs, i.e., cdgK, cdgA, cdgL, and vpvC were present in 84 %, 75.5 %, 72 % and 68 % of isolates, respectively. Besides, the non-O1/non-O139 isolates were screened for the occurrence of virulence factor encoding genes. Moreover, among these non-O1/non-O139 isolates, two strains (3.17 %) harbored both ctxA and ctxB genes, which encode the cholera toxin associated with epidemic cholera. ompU was the most prevalent virulence factor, present in 24.8 % of isolates. Other virulence factors like, zot and st were found in 4.7 % and 9.5 % of isolates. Genes encoding tcp and ace were found to be PCR-negative for the isolates. Additionally, crucial virulence factor regulators, toxT, toxR and hapR were found to be PCR-positive in all the isolates. Antibiotic resistance patterns displayed further vulnerabilities with decreased sensitivity towards commonly used antibiotics with multiple antibiotic resistance index ranging between 0.37 and 0.62. The presence of cholera toxin-encoding multi-drug resistant (MDR) V. cholerae strains in environmental settings is alarming. High occurrence of DGCs are considered to encourage further investigations to use them as alternative therapeutic targets against MDR cholera pathogen due to their unique presence in bacterial systems. •V. cholerae isolates were non-O1/non-O139 predominantly biofilm-forming.•CdgH and cdgM were abundant biofilm regulatory DGCs.•Cholera toxin encoding genes were found in two isolates.•ompU, zot, st were the accessory virulence factors.•Multiple antibiotic resistance index ranged across 0.37–0.62.
ISSN:0882-4010
1096-1208
1096-1208
DOI:10.1016/j.micpath.2024.106995