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Intestinal colonization against Vibrio cholerae: host and microbial resistance mechanisms

Journal

AIMS MICROBIOLOGY
Volume 9, Issue 2, Pages 346-374

Publisher

AMER INST MATHEMATICAL SCIENCES-AIMS
DOI: 10.3934/microbiol.2023019

Keywords

Vibrio cholerae; colonization resistance; cholera; enteric pathogen; cholera susceptibility

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Vibrio cholerae is a non-invasive enteric pathogen that causes cholera by easily transmitting from contaminated food and water into the human host. It must overcome multiple colonization resistance mechanisms derived from the host and gut commensals in order to survive, grow, and colonize the intestine, leading to infection.
Vibrio cholerae is a non-invasive enteric pathogen known to cause a major public health problem called cholera. The pathogen inhabits the aquatic environment while outside the human host, it is transmitted into the host easily through ingesting contaminated food and water containing the vibrios, thus causing diarrhoea and vomiting. V. cholerae must resist several layers of colonization resistance mechanisms derived from the host or the gut commensals to successfully survive, grow, and colonize the distal intestinal epithelium, thus causing an infection. The colonization resistance mechanisms derived from the host are not specific to V. cholerae but to all invading pathogens. However, some of the gut commensal-derived colonization resistance may be more specific to the pathogen, making it more challenging to overcome. Consequently, the pathogen has evolved well -coordinated mechanisms that sense and utilize the anti-colonization factors to modulate events that promote its survival and colonization in the gut. This review is aimed at discussing how V. cholerae interacts and resists both host-and microbe-specific colonization resistance mechanisms to cause infection.

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