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Nov 11, 2020 · It is increasingly clear that the diversity of species and biochemical activities within the gut microbiome represents a driver of infection outcome, through their ability to manipulate the signals used by V. cholerae to regulate virulence and fitness in vivo.
- Figure - PMC - National Center for Biotechnology Information
V. cholerae virulence regulatory networks. Major...
- The NorR Regulon Is Critical for Vibrio cholerae Resistance to Nitric ...
Little is known about what environmental stresses Vibrio...
- Vibrio cholerae, classification, pathogenesis, immune ...
CTX is the main virulence factor in toxigenic V. cholerae...
- Vibrio cholerae Infection - StatPearls - NCBI Bookshelf
Identify the epidemiology of Vibrio cholerae infection....
- Figure - PMC - National Center for Biotechnology Information
It is increasingly clear that the diversity of species and biochemical activities within the gut microbiome represents a driver of infection outcome, through their ability to manipulate the signals used by V. cholerae to regulate virulence and fitness in vivo.
- Ansel Hsiao, Jun Zhu
- 2020
Jun 21, 2018 · Once in the human host, after reaching the small intestine, Vibrio cholerae begins expressing genes encoding virulence factors, such as toxin-co-regulated pilus (Tcp) and cholera toxin....
- Craig Baker-Austin, James D. Oliver, Munirul Alam, Afsar Ali, Matthew K. Waldor, Firdausi Qadri, Jai...
- 2018
The ability of V. cholerae to colonize and cause disease in hosts requires production of a number of virulence factors during infection. The two major viru-lence determinants of V. cholerae are encoded by two separate genetic elements.
Jan 1, 2001 · Vibrio cholerae causes the diarrheal disease cholera primarily because it expresses a colonization factor (toxin-coregulated pilus; TCP) and a potent toxin (cholera toxin; CT) within the human intestine.