AI Article Synopsis

  • A study analyzed 469 Vibrio vulnificus strains from Gulf of Mexico oysters over 2 years, identifying 58% as genotype A, 29% as genotype B, and 13% as genotype A/B.
  • When using virulence-correlated gene typing, 65% were found to be genotype E and 35% genotype C, with a 93% agreement noted between the two genotyping methods for typical genotypes.
  • D-mannitol fermentation demonstrated a high predictive ability for genotypes, showing 86% and 85% agreement for 16S rRNA and vcg genotype, respectively, making it a cost-effective screening method for virulence potential.

Article Abstract

Vibrio vulnificus strains (n = 469) isolated from the Gulf of Mexico oysters and waters over a period of 2 years were subjected to phenotypic and genotypic characterizations. Of the strains that could be definitively genotyped (n = 465), 58% were classified as genotype A, 29% as genotype B, and 13% as genotype A/B by 16S rRNA genotyping. When the same strain bank was characterized by virulence-correlated gene (vcg) typing, 65% were genotype E while 35% were genotype C. Further analysis focusing on strains falling into typical genotype categories (i.e., 16S rRNA types A or B, excluding type A/B strains) showed a high degree of concordance (93%) when comparing the two genotyping methods. d-Mannitol fermentation was also predictive of genotype, with an 86% agreement between 16S rRNA genotype and mannitol fermentation patterns, and an 85% agreement between vcg genotype and mannitol fermentation patterns. d-Mannitol fermentation should be considered as a simple and less expensive alternative to screen V. vulnificus isolates for virulence potential, particularly when analyzing large strain banks.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1089/fpd.2009.0362DOI Listing

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