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Profiling a Pathogen There are many challenges to identifying the guilty from among the innocent • Natural populations of Vp are made up mostly of harmless bacteria. • Pathogens are nearly never detected in the environment even during outbreaks. • In order to determine whether pathogens are present, you have to be able to recognize the pathogens. • We have both native and invasive pathogens to worry about (e.g. serotypes O3:K6, and west coast O4:K12) How can you tell if there are pathogens present abundance of a species ≠ abundance of pathogens Most useful diagnostic tools are based on unique traits or genetic material: virulence factors must be confirmed in animal model for infection (or in human subjects) Vibrio cholerae (Vc): Cholera toxin (encoded in a virus that infected some strains and became part of its genome) [email protected] u Vibrio vulnificus (Vv) : No trait or gene content that is yet diagnostic Vibrio parahaemolyticus (Vp): Traits/genes associated with but not diagnostic of virulence potential • Hemolysis: tdh/trh • Caveat: not required for virulence M. N ishibuchi • Cytotoxicity and Enterotoxicity: T3SS1 and T3SS2 • Caveats: all strains have T3SS1, not all strains that have T3SS2 are known pathogenic, nonpathogenic strains can be more cytotoxic than clinical strains • Serotyping (O:K) and Phylogeny (relatedness)? e.g. Pandemic Vp (O3:K6) and west coast ST36 (O4:K12/KUT) RSC Publishing Challenges and questions we face: Can we determine the abundance of pathogenic strains from among the background of harmless strains? Are tdh/trh sufficient for predicting pathogenic potential or would other traits/genes be useful? How can we better predict and forecast public health risks? What conditions allow pathogens to thrive as residents? By learning to better identify pathogenic strains, we can develop targeted surveillance and also learn what conditions promote their abundance in oysters Phylogeny (Family tree) 2010-2011 * * * W * W ORF8 td h trh W : Wound *: from MA :sequenced * W W Few clinical strains from 2010-2011 are of documented sequence types Pandemic O3:K6 O4:K12 Cape Cod endemic clade Pacific How can you tell if a strain is a pathogen • Presence of pathogen associated markers doesn’t mean a strain is pathogenic • The standard for virulence requires an animal model for infection • Current models are insufficient Alternative invertebrate model for virulence of Vibrio parahaemolyticus Incubate at 37C for 6 hrs. Incubate at 28C for the duration of the assay Observe: mobility (chemotaxis towards attractant) Velocity Virulence of strains in nematode model Acknowledgements Lab Members and previous students: Jeff Sun Evan DaSilva Randi Foxall Ash Marcinkiewicz Caroline Ward Avery Normandin Saba Ilyas Kylie Webber Matt Gerding Rachel Donner Anna Tyzik Megan Striplin Jong Yu Crystal Ellis NH State Public Health Lab Jenny Mahoney MA Public Health Lab Funding: USDA, NHAES