Abstract:
Cholera, a severe acute watery diarrhoeal disease, is caused by a motile, Gram-negative,
bacillus named Vibrio cholerae. Millions of people around the globe died of cholera in
the past. Cholera has remained endemic in South Asia and the first six pandemics have
been considered to have originated from the Bay of Bengal. The favorable climatic
conditions and contaminated water and food have maintained the disease in this region
including Pakistan. In the last few years, WHO reported a significant increase in cholera
cases around the world particularly in Haiti, Zimbabwe and Pakistan. The present study
was carried out to characterize Vibrio cholerae isolates from Pakistan which involved
determining the prevalence of different serogroups, phenotypic and genotypic
characterization of associated antibiotic resistance, analysis of the cholera toxin (CTX)
prophage, clonal relationship study, whole genome sequence analysis and single
nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) based phylogeny. During this study (2009-2011), 113
V. cholerae O1 El Tor isolates were collected from cholera patients in different cities of
Pakistan. Among these 113 isolates, 108 (96%) have O1 serogroup and El Tor biotype
whereas the serotype was Ogawa. Serogroup O139 which used to exist in Pakistan and
elsewhere in the past was replaced by O1 serogroup. All the isolates were resistant to
sulfamethoxazole, trimethoprim, streptomycin and nalidixic acid. However, resistance to
tetracycline, ampicillin, ceftazidime, erythromycin, cefotaxime, chloramphenicol and
ciprofloxacin was seen in 63%, 19.5%, 7.2%, 2%, 01%, 06% and 01% isolates
respectively, whereas all isolates were sensitive to ofloxacin. At the genotypic level SXT
integrative and conjugative element (ICE), was present in all the isolates whereas
integrons (class 1, 2 and 3) and qnrA, qnrB and qnrS for encoding quinolone resistance
were absent in all the O1 El Tor isolates studied. Genetic basis of resistance to
sulfamethoxazole, trimethoprim, streptomycin and tetracycline was analyzed by detecting
sul2, dfrA1, strAB, tetA and tetA which were present in all the isolates showing resistance
to the respective antibiotic respectively. florR was detected in about 37 isolates, however
only six of them showed resistance phenotype for chloramphenicol. gyrA and parC were
also studied for mutations responsible for quinolones resistance; all the isolates had transversions of AGT (underlined) and TCG (underlined) in codons 83 (substituting
isoleucine for serine) and 85 (substituting leucine for serine) in case of gyrA and parC
respectively, these mutations render bacteria resistant to quinolones. Year wise (2009-
2011) antibiotic analysis showed an increasing trend of antibiotic resistance which should
be properly addressed by focusing on the standard treatment of cholera, rehydration
therapy, whereas antibiotics should be prescribed only in case of severe dehydration.
CTX prophage was analyzed by different PCRs and sequencing approaches. Cholera
toxin which is the major virulence factor of V. cholerae was present in all O1 El Tor
isolates except one isolate, CS15 from Charsada. All the isolates have ctxB of classical
biotype. CTX prophage analysis revealed that all isolates have only one copy of CTXф
located on the large chromosome, no tandem repeats of CTX prophage and RS1 were
found and the order of RS1 and CTX prophage in the genome of V. cholerae O1 El Tor
was: 5’-RSI-CTX prophage-3’. The frequency of heptanucleotide repeat (TTTTGAT)
between ctxA and zot for ToxR binding in these isolates varied from 5 to 6 which is
high in the region and frequently related to the toxin productivity of the isolates.
Multi-locus variable number of tandem repeat analysis (MLVA) of V. cholerae O1 El Tor
isolates based on five loci divided the 98 El Tor isolates into 47 sequence types belonging
to six clonal complexes (CCs) and three singletons. Epidemiological data revealed that
CC1 was associated with cholera cases all over the country in 2011 and Rawalpindi in
2009 whereas as V. cholerae O1 El Tor causing cholera in 2010 were associated with
CC2, CC4 and CC3. Based on characteristic antibiotic resistance patterns and
presence/absence of tagA and aldA, all V. cholerae O1 El Tor isolates were categorized in
two groups, however MLVA generated clonal complexes did not reflected such
relationship. The whole genome sequence analysis of the isolates and comparative
genomics divided the V. cholerae O1 El Tor isolates from Pakistan in two categories.
Genome wide SNPs analysis was carried out using the whole genome sequence data and
a global phylogenetic tree was constructed comparing Pakistan Vibrio cholerae O1 El
Tor isolates with 146 global and temporal representative V. cholerae isolates. All the O1
El Tor isolates from Pakistan were classified in two unique sub-clades named as Pakistan
sub-clade 1 (PSC-1) and Pakistan sub-clade 2 (PSC-2) respectively. Both PSCs belonged
to the third transmission wave of the current seventh pandemic. Both sub-clades
possessed distinct antibiotic resistance patterns and were distinguished by signature
deletions in Vibrio pathogenicity island -1 (VPI-1) and Vibrio seventh pandemic 2 (VSP-
2). All the PSC-1 isolates had a unique three gene (VC0819-VC0821) deletion in VPI-1
whereas in PSC-2 VPI-1 was intact. In PSC-1 a four gene (VC0495-VC0498) deletion
was present in VSP-2 whereas a large 18 gene (VC0495-VC0512) deletion was present in
VSP-2 of PSC-2. PSC-2 representing (4/4) and (31/38) isolates in 2009 and 2010
respectively was dominant in Pakistan whereas PSC-1 was only seen in Karachi
representing (6/7) isolates. However in 2011, PSC-1 has apparently replaced PSC-2
representing 54/56 (96.5%) isolates and only 2/56 (3.5%) belonged to PSC-2. In nutshell,
the study showed that two sub-clades with distinct antibiotic resistance patterns and
genomic signatures circulating in Pakistan caused cholera during 2009-2011.
Furthermore, SNPs based genetic markers can be used to track and identify the
distribution of existing V. cholerae sub-clades or even any new type in future.