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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Evidence of a Dominant Lineage of Vibrio cholerae-Specific Lytic Bacteriophages Shed by Cholera Patients over a 10-Year Period in Dhaka, Bangladesh

TLDR
A unique bacteriophage present in all samples is described, its evolution is inferred by sequencing multiple isolates from different patients over time, and the host receptor that shows that the bacteriophile specifically predates the serogroup of V. cholerae O1 is identified.
Abstract
Lytic bacteriophages are hypothesized to contribute to the seasonality and duration of cholera epidemics in Bangladesh. However, the bacteriophages contributing to this phenomenon have yet to be characterized at a molecular genetic level. In this study, we isolated and sequenced the genomes of 15 bacteriophages from stool samples from cholera patients spanning a 10-year surveillance period in Dhaka, Bangladesh. Our results indicate that a single novel bacteriophage type, designated ICP1 (for the International Centre for Diarrhoeal Disease Research, Bangladesh cholera phage 1) is present in all stool samples from cholera patients, while two other bacteriophage types, one novel (ICP2) and one T7-like (ICP3), are transient. ICP1 is a member of the Myoviridae family and has a 126-kilobase genome comprising 230 open reading frames. Comparative sequence analysis of ICP1 and related isolates from this time period indicates a high level of genetic conservation. The ubiquitous presence of ICP1 in cholera patients and the finding that the O1 antigen of lipopolysaccharide (LPS) serves as the ICP1 receptor suggest that ICP1 is extremely well adapted to predation of human-pathogenic V. cholerae O1. IMPORTANCE The severe diarrheal disease cholera is caused by the bacterium Vibrio cholerae, which can be transmitted to humans from the aquatic environment. Factors that affect V. cholerae in the environment can impact the occurrence of cholera outbreaks; one of these factors is thought to be the presence of bacterial viruses, or bacteriophages. Bacteriophages that prey on V. cholerae in the environment, and potentially in humans, have not been extensively genetically characterized. Here, we isolated and sequenced the genomes of bacteriophages from cholera patient stool samples collected over a 10-year period in Dhaka, Bangladesh, a region that suffers from regular cholera outbreaks. We describe a unique bacteriophage present in all samples, infer its evolution by sequencing multiple isolates from different patients over time, and identify the host receptor that shows that the bacteriophage specifically predates the serogroup of V. cholerae responsible for the majority of disease occurrences.

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Citations
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A bacteriophage encodes its own CRISPR/Cas adaptive response to evade host innate immunity

TL;DR: A remarkable turn of events is shown, in which a phage-encoded CRISPR/Cas system is used to counteract a phages inhibitory chromosomal island of the bacterial host.
Journal ArticleDOI

Resistance Development to Bacteriophages Occurring during Bacteriophage Therapy

TL;DR: Phage resistance should not be underestimated and efforts should be made to develop methodologies for monitoring and preventing it, and understanding and taking advantage of the resistance-induced fitness costs in bacterial pathogens is a potentially promising avenue.
Journal ArticleDOI

Environmental reservoirs and mechanisms of persistence of Vibrio cholerae.

TL;DR: How V. cholerae can survive stressors such as starvation, temperature, and salinity fluctuations as well as how the organism persists under constant predation by heterotrophic protists is discussed.
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A cocktail of three virulent bacteriophages prevents Vibrio cholerae infection in animal models

TL;DR: Genome sequencing and variant analysis of the surviving colonies indicate that resistance to the phages is largely conferred by mutations in genes required for the production of the phage receptors, suggesting that phage prophylaxis could provide a strategy to limit the impact of bacterial disease on human health.
Journal ArticleDOI

Gut Microbial Succession Follows Acute Secretory Diarrhea in Humans

TL;DR: After Vibrio cholerae infection, the human gut microbiota undergoes an orderly and reproducible succession that features transient reversals in relative levels of enteric Bacteroides and Prevotella, suggesting opportunities for diagnostics and therapies targeting the gut microbiota in humans recovering from infectious diarrhea.
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Journal ArticleDOI

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WebLogo: A Sequence Logo Generator

TL;DR: WebLogo generates sequence logos, graphical representations of the patterns within a multiple sequence alignment that provide a richer and more precise description of sequence similarity than consensus sequences and can rapidly reveal significant features of the alignment otherwise difficult to perceive.
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Velvet: Algorithms for de novo short read assembly using de Bruijn graphs

TL;DR: Velvet represents a new approach to assembly that can leverage very short reads in combination with read pairs to produce useful assemblies and is in close agreement with simulated results without read-pair information.
Journal ArticleDOI

Simple methods for estimating the numbers of synonymous and nonsynonymous nucleotide substitutions.

TL;DR: It is shown that all available methods tend to give an underestimate of the number of nonsynonymous substitutions when the number is large and computer simulation indicates that estimates of synonymous substitutions obtained by the two methods are quite accurate unless the numberof nucleotide substitutions per site is very large.
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