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Genomics of the Argentinian cholera epidemic elucidate the contrasting dynamics of epidemic and endemic Vibrio cholerae.

Matthew J DormanDaryl DommanTomás Javier PoklepovichCharlotte TolleyGisella ZolezziLeanne KaneMaría Rosa ViñasMarcela PanagópuloMiriam MoroniNorma BinszteinMaría Inés CafferSimon ClareGordon DouganGeorge P C SalmondJulian ParkhillJosefina CamposNicholas R Thomson
Published in: Nature communications (2020)
In order to control and eradicate epidemic cholera, we need to understand how epidemics begin, how they spread, and how they decline and eventually end. This requires extensive sampling of epidemic disease over time, alongside the background of endemic disease that may exist concurrently with the epidemic. The unique circumstances surrounding the Argentinian cholera epidemic of 1992-1998 presented an opportunity to do this. Here, we use 490 Argentinian V. cholerae genome sequences to characterise the variation within, and between, epidemic and endemic V. cholerae. We show that, during the 1992-1998 cholera epidemic, the invariant epidemic clone co-existed alongside highly diverse members of the Vibrio cholerae species in Argentina, and we contrast the clonality of epidemic V. cholerae with the background diversity of local endemic bacteria. Our findings refine and add nuance to our genomic definitions of epidemic and endemic cholera, and are of direct relevance to controlling current and future cholera epidemics.
Keyphrases
  • magnetic resonance imaging
  • computed tomography
  • gene expression
  • single cell
  • current status