Volume 80, Issue 1 pp. 23-28

Detection of heat-stable enterotoxin in a cholera toxin gene-positive strain of Vibrio cholerae 01

Tae Takeda

Corresponding Author

Tae Takeda

Department of Infectious Diseases Research, National Children's Medical Research Center, Tokyo, Japan

1Correspondence to: T. Takeda, Department of Infectious Diseases Research, National Children's Medical Research Center, 3-35-31 Taishido, Setagaya-ku, Tokyo 154, JapanSearch for more papers by this author
Yuan Peina

Yuan Peina

Department of Infectious Diseases Research, National Children's Medical Research Center, Tokyo, Japan

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Akira Ogawa

Akira Ogawa

Department of Infectious Diseases Research, National Children's Medical Research Center, Tokyo, Japan

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Sekiko Dohi

Sekiko Dohi

Department of Infectious Diseases Research, National Children's Medical Research Center, Tokyo, Japan

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Hisao Abe

Hisao Abe

Narita Airport Quarantine Station, Narita, Japan

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G.Balakrish Nair

G.Balakrish Nair

National Institute of Cholera and Enteric Diseases, Beliaghata, Calcutta, India

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S.C. Pal

S.C. Pal

National Institute of Cholera and Enteric Diseases, Beliaghata, Calcutta, India

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First published: May 1991
Citations: 11

Summary

DNA colony hybridization with a polynucleotide clonal DNA probe for heat-stable enterotoxin of Vibrio cholerae non-01 (NAG-ST) was used to screen 197 isolates of V. cholerae 01. Under stringent hybridizing and washing conditions, one strain (GP156) reacted with the probe. The concentrated supernatant from V. cholerae 01 GP156, heated at 100°C for 5 min, elicited fluid accumulation in the suckling mice and that could be completely netralized by an anti-NAG-ST monoclonal antibody (mAb2F). The preparation from V. cholerae 01 GP156 also inhibited the binding of mAb2F to NAG-ST in a competitive ELISA. V. cholerae 01 GP156 was confirmed to possess a gene encoding cholera toxin (CT). The results indicate that a heat-stable enterotoxin is produced by certain strains of CT-producing V. cholerae 01.

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