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Appl. Environ. Microbiol., 07 1995, 2620-2623, Vol 61, No. 7
JD Oliver and R Bockian
Vibrio vulnificus is an estuarine bacterium responsible for 95% of all
seafood-related deaths in the United States. The bacterium occurs naturally
in molluscan shellfish, and ingestion of raw oysters is typically the
source of human infection. V. vulnificus is also known to enter a viable
but nonculturable (VBNC) state, wherein the cells are no longer culturable
on routine plating media but can be shown to remain viable. Whether or not
this human pathogen remains virulent when entering the VBNC state has not
been definitively demonstrated. In this study, the VBNC state was induced
through a temperature downshift to 5 degrees C, with cells becoming
nonculturable (< 0.1 CFU/ml) within 7 days. As they became
nonculturable, virulence was determined by employing an iron overload mouse
model. At the point of nonculturability (7 days), injections of the diluted
microcosm population resulted in death when < 0.04 CFU was inoculated,
although > 10(5) cells in the VBNC state were present in the inoculum.
Culturable cells of V. vulnificus, with identification confirmed through
PCR, were recovered from the blood and peritoneal cavities of mice which
had died from injections of cells present in the VBNC state for at least 3
days. Thus, our data suggest that cells of V. vulnificus remain virulent,
at least for some time, when present in the VBNC state and are capable of
causing fatal infections following in vivo resuscitation. Our studies also
indicate, however, that virulence decreases significantly as cells enter
the VBNC state, which may account, at least to some extent, for the
decrease in infections caused by this bacterium during winter months.
Copyright © 1995, American Society for Microbiology
In vivo resuscitation, and virulence towards mice, of viable but nonculturable cells of Vibrio vulnificus
Department of Biology, University of North Carolina at Charlotte 28223, USA.
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