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Evidence for several waves of global transmission in the seventh cholera pandemicopen access

Authors
Mutreja, AnkurKim, Dong WookThomson, Nicholas R.Connor, Thomas R.Lee, Je HeeKariuki, SamuelCroucher, Nicholas J.Choi, Seon YoungHarris, Simon R.Lebens, MichaelNiyogi, Swapan KumarKim, Eun JinRamamurthy, T.Chun, JongsikWood, James L. N.Clemens, John D.Czerkinsky, CecilNair, G. BalakrishHolmgren, JanParkhill, JulianDougan, Gordon
Issue Date
Sep-2011
Publisher
NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
Keywords
STRAINS; EL-TOR; ELEMENT; EVOLUTION; SEQUENCES; VIETNAM; POPULATIONS; O139; VIBRIO-CHOLERAE
Citation
NATURE, v.477, no.7365, pp 462 - 465
Pages
4
Indexed
SCI
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
NATURE
Volume
477
Number
7365
Start Page
462
End Page
465
URI
https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/erica/handle/2021.sw.erica/37183
DOI
10.1038/nature10392
ISSN
0028-0836
1476-4687
Abstract
Vibrio cholerae is a globally important pathogen that is endemic in many areas of the world and causes 3-5 million reported cases of cholera every year. Historically, there have been seven acknowledged cholera pandemics; recent outbreaks in Zimbabwe and Haiti are included in the seventh and ongoing pandemic(1). Only isolates in serogroup O1 (consisting of two biotypes known as 'classical' and 'El Tor') and the derivative O139 (refs 2, 3) can cause epidemic cholera(2). It is believed that the first six cholera pandemics were caused by the classical biotype, but El Tor has subsequently spread globally and replaced the classical biotype in the current pandemic(1). Detailed molecular epidemiological mapping of cholera has been compromised by a reliance on sub-genomic regions such as mobile elements to infer relationships, making El Tor isolates associated with the seventh pandemic seem superficially diverse. To understand the underlying phylogeny of the lineage responsible for the current pandemic, we identified high-resolution markers (single nucleotide polymorphisms; SNPs) in 154 whole-genome sequences of globally and temporally representative V. cholerae isolates. Using this phylogeny, we show here that the seventh pandemic has spread from the Bay of Bengal in at least three independent but overlapping waves with a common ancestor in the 1950s, and identify several transcontinental transmission events. Additionally, we show how the acquisition of the SXT family of antibiotic resistance elements has shaped pandemic spread, and show that this family was first acquired at least ten years before its discovery in V. cholerae.
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