A. M. Devault, G. B. Golding, N. Waglechner, J. M. Enk, M. Kuch, J. H. Tien, M. Shi, D. N. Fisman, A. N. Dhody, S. Forrest, K. I. Bos, D. J. D. Earn, E. C. Holmes, and H. N. Poinar (2014)
Second-pandemic strain of Vibrio cholerae from the Philadelphia cholera outbreak of 1849
The New England Journal of Medicine, 370(4):334-340.
In the 19th century, there were several major cholera pandemics in the Indian subcontinent, Europe, and North America. The causes of these outbreaks and the genomic strain identities remain a mystery. We used targeted high-throughput sequencing to reconstruct the Vibrio cholerae genome from the preserved intestine of a victim of the 1849 cholera outbreak in Philadelphia, part of the second cholera pandemic. This O1 biotype strain has 95 to 97\% similarity with the classical O395 genome, differing by 203 single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs), lacking three genomic islands, and probably having one or more tandem cholera toxin prophage (CTX) arrays, which potentially affected its virulence. This result highlights archived medical remains as a potential resource for investigations into the genomic origins of past pandemics.
Bacterial Typing Techniques Cholera/epidemiology/*history/microbiology DNA, Bacterial/isolation & purification DNA, Mitochondrial/analysis Evolution, Molecular Genome, Bacterial Genomic Islands History, 19th Century Humans Intestines/microbiology/pathology Male Pandemics/*history Philadelphia/epidemiology Phylogeny Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide Sequence Analysis, DNA Vibrio cholerae/classification/*genetics/pathogenicity Virulence Virulence Factors/analysis
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