Fitness Factors in Vibrios: A Mini-review
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
5-1-2013
Abstract
Vibrios are Gram-negative curved bacilli that occur naturally in marine, estuarine, and freshwater systems. Some species include human and animal pathogens, and some vibrios are necessary for natural systems, including the carbon cycle and osmoregulation. Countless in vivo and in vitro studies have examined the interactions between vibrios and their environment, including molecules, cells, whole animals, and abiotic substrates. Many studies have characterized virulence factors, attachment factors, regulatory factors, and antimicrobial resistance factors, and most of these factors impact the organism's fitness regardless of its external environment. This review aims to identify common attributes among factors that increase fitness in various environments, regardless of whether the environment is an oyster, a rabbit, a flask of immortalized mammalian cells, or a planktonic chitin particle. This review aims to summarize findings published thus far to encapsulate some of the basic similarities among the many vibrio fitness factors and how they frame our understanding of vibrio ecology. Factors representing these similarities include hemolysins, capsular polysaccharides, flagella, proteases, attachment factors, type III secretion systems, chitin binding proteins, iron acquisition systems, and colonization factors. © 2013 Springer Science+Business Media New York.
Publication Source (Journal or Book title)
Microbial Ecology
First Page
826
Last Page
851
Recommended Citation
Johnson, C. (2013). Fitness Factors in Vibrios: A Mini-review. Microbial Ecology, 65 (4), 826-851. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00248-012-0168-x