Taxonomy: Bacteria; Proteobacteria; Gammaproteobacteria; Vibrionales; Vibrionaceae;

Vibrio

Visit the user forum to exchange ideas via a bulletin board, shared document center, and inquiry units.

Read about Vibrio:   Pathogen Information   ASM journals   Google news search  chain link

Hide info

Vibrio

I. Organism Information

A. Taxonomy Information

1. Species

a. V. cholerae

i. Taxonomy ID: 666

ii. Description:

Vibrio cholerae is a Gram negative, motile, curved rod. Its main portal of entry is via oral ingestion of contaminated food or water. More than 138 serogroups are known. Serogroup O1 is responsible for pandemic cholera and is divided into two biotypes, Classical and El Tor. The El Tor biotype is responsible for the current cholera pandemic.

To contribute a blurb on serotypes, biotypes, or handling the organism in healthcare or laboratory facilities, please contact help@nmpdr.org Your contribution will be credited with a byline.

iii. Variants

Vibrio cholerae serotype O1
Taxonomy ID: 127906 

Vibrio cholerae serotype O139
Taxonomy ID: 45888 

Vibrio cholerae serotype non-O1/non-O139
Taxonomy ID: 156539 

b. V. parahaemolyticus

c. V. vulnificus

B. Lifecycle and Morphology

1. V. cholerae

a. Free-swimming

The vibrio life cycle consists of a free-swimming phase in marine and estuarine environments in association with zooplankton, crustaceans, insects, and water plants. Vibrios interact with various surfaces found in the environment to generate biofilms, which may promote survival.

i.   Shape:  Flagellated cell is 0.5-0.8 µm in width and 1.4-2.6 µm in length. Monotrichous or multitrichous flagella are enclosed in a sheath continuous with the outer membrane of the cell wall. On solid media, cells may produce numerous lateral flagella with a wavelength shorter than that of the sheathed polar flagellum.

b. Host phase

The host phase of the vibrio life cycle is only possible through the action of a group of virulence genes in the ToxR regulon controlled by a complex and incompletely understood regulatory cascade. The ToxR regulon colonization and toxin genes are coordinately expressed in response to specific host signals that have yet to be completely defined.

 

Hide info
Hide literature list
Full text access requires a personal or institutional subscription. See open access journals.

Reading journals.

Journals read.


Hide literature list

Hide news list


Mariah Drinks Away the Pregnancy Rumors
Hollyscoop, CA - Dec 31, 2008
Raw oysters can carry a bacteria called Vibrio parahaemolyticus, which can cause nausea, diarrhea, vomiting and in some individuals, abdominal cramps and ...

The paramount war criminal Tony Blair - For Virtue, Vibrio and God
Center for Research on Globalization, Canada - Dec 15, 2008
Do Blair or Brown know the cholera vibrio was put to work for Empire? The British internment camps of the second Boer War were the first targeted at a ...

Cholera: Treatment is simple, just not in Zimbabwe
Los Angeles Times, CA - Dec 11, 2008
Cholera is an acute diarrheal illness caused by infection by the bacterium Vibrio cholerae.The organism spreads when infected feces enter the water supply ...

Harare goes cuckoo
Zim Online, Zimbabwe - 8 hours ago
... Ndlovu’s argument that MI6 and CIA agents had contaminated Harare and Chitungwiza’s water sources with bacterium vibrio cholerae; which causes cholera. ...

Explainer: cholera
guardian.co.uk, UK - Dec 11, 2008
Cholera is caused by the Vibrio cholerae bacterium, which infects the gut with an often dramatic outcome. For many people the illness is mild, ...
Last updated: Less than a minute ago ireport
all 3 news articles

SmartAboutHealth

FACTBOX-Zimbabwe suffers cholera epidemic
Reuters - Dec 18, 2008
Cholera is an acute diarrhoeal infection caused by the bacterium Vibrio cholerae. Transmission is through faecal-oral contamination or ingesting ...
Video: Zimbabwes Cholera Crisis CBS
Fatal infection in an ailing nation The National
all 378 news articles

We can make cholera history, and why not?
IPPmedia, United Republic of Tanzania - Dec 17, 2008
A highly quotable health expert says: ``Cholera is an infection caused by Vibrio cholerae. Its incubation period ranges from a few hours to five days. ...

Cure for cholera: a heavy dose of political will
Times Online, UK - Dec 10, 2008
Today, Robert Mugabe's most powerful accuser is John Snow, the man who tracked down the cause of the bacterium Vibrio cholerae in Victorian Britain. ...
Hundreds Dead, Tens of Thousands Ill From Highly Preventable Disease NewsBlaze
all 6 news articles

MercoPress

Chilean authorities warn about sea food consumption in summer
MercoPress, Uruguay - Dec 17, 2008
Deputy Juan Lobos president of the Health Committee said on Tuesday that although measures have been taken, “it’s essential to stop vibrio parahaemolyticus ...

Times Online

The Cholera effect and Mugabe`s isolation
Modern Ghana, Ghana - Dec 12, 2008
It seems that this little parasite, the bacteria called Vibrio cholerae and the debilitating ailment that it causes has introduced the “Cholera Effect” into ...
Video: Rice Calls on Zimbabwe's Mugabe to 'Leave' AssociatedPress
Cholera in Zimbabwe: Old epidemic in modern times Scientific American
Mugabe insists Zimbabwe's cholera crisis over Toronto Star
all 2,761 news articles

Hide news list

Virtual structural proteome: browse a table of all cholera proteins with entries or homologs in PDB
Vibrio genome sequence annotation status: click numbers to browse lists of genes or subsystems
Strain annotated in NMPDR Genome size, bp Protein Encoding Genes (PEGs) Named genes in subsystems Named genes not in subsystems Hypothetical genes in subsystems Hypothetical genes not in subsystems Subsystems RNAs
Vibrio cholerae MO104,024,2863,4241364(39.8%) 1370(40.0%) 28(0.8%) 662(19.3%)234n/d
Vibrio cholerae NRT36s4,204,6514,4331325(31.3%) 1940(45.9%) 27(0.6%) 939(22.2%)20229
Vibrio cholerae O1 biovar eltor str. N169614,033,4643,9071471(36.0%) 1473(36.0%) 31(0.8%) 1114(27.2%)280122
Vibrio cholerae O3954,148,6803,5091367(39.0%) 1380(39.3%) 27(0.8%) 735(20.9%)235n/d
Vibrio fischeri ES1144,284,0503,8021412(35.7%) 1654(41.8%) 22(0.6%) 869(22.0%)256155
Vibrio parahaemolyticus RIMD 22106335,165,7704,8641632(32.6%) 1981(39.6%) 35(0.7%) 1360(27.2%)283160
Vibrio sp. Ex254,839,8774,2361507(35.6%) 1710(40.4%) 28(0.7%) 991(23.4%)236n/d
Vibrio sp. MED2224,891,9014,2991550(35.1%) 1685(38.2%) 27(0.6%) 1153(26.1%)258116
Vibrio splendidus 12B015,596,3864,9311461(29.1%) 2107(41.9%) 25(0.5%) 1433(28.5%)24395
Vibrio vulnificus CMCP65,126,7984,5121603(34.8%) 1874(40.7%) 39(0.8%) 1088(23.6%)283111
Vibrio vulnificus YJ0165,260,0864,9231630(32.2%) 1828(36.1%) 38(0.8%) 1564(30.9%)287140

Search the Genomes On Line Database (GOLD) for Vibrio to see completed and on-going sequencing projects.