Vibrio cholerae belonging to the family Vibrionaceae. The genus Vibrio comprises Gram-negative, mostly curved rods with a length of 1.5-2 m m and a width of approximately 0.5 m m, which have a single polar flagellum. The name Vibrio goes back to the Danish physician and naturalist Otto Friedrich Müller, who observed vigorous movements of the vibrios in a water drop during microscopy. The vibrios can be divided into serotypes based on O-antigens (lipopolysaccharides), like other gram-negative bacteria. The causative agent of cholera are almost exclusively strains of Serovarietät 0:1 with the subgroups Ogawa and Inaba. Due to the physiological characteristics, they are divided into the cholerae and El Tor biotypes. Another cholera pathogen that is particularly widespread in the Indian subcontinent, the serotype 0:139. More: http://www.vibrio-cholerae.org/
More: http://www.vibrio-cholerae.org/
Vibrio cholerae belonging to the family Vibrionaceae. The genus Vibrio comprises Gram-negative, mostly curved rods with a length of 1.5-2 m m and a width of approximately 0.5 m m, which have a single polar flagellum. The name Vibrio goes back to the Danish physician and naturalist Otto Friedrich Müller, who observed vigorous movements of the vibrios in a water drop during microscopy. The vibrios can be divided into serotypes based on O-antigens (lipopolysaccharides), like other gram-negative bacteria. The causative agent of cholera are almost exclusively strains of Serovarietät 0:1 with the subgroups Ogawa and Inaba. Due to the physiological characteristics, they are divided into the cholerae and El Tor biotypes. Another cholera pathogen that is particularly widespread in the Indian subcontinent, the serotype 0:139. More: http://www.vibrio-cholerae.org/More: http://www.vibrio-cholerae.org/
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