Isolation and Characterization of Vibrio vulnificus Inhabiting the Marine Environment of the Southwestern Area of Taiwan

J Biomed Sci. 1995 Oct;2(4):384-389. doi: 10.1007/BF02255226.

Abstract

Vibrio vulnificus, a marine bacterium, is of concern in Taiwan because it causes wound infections and sepsis with a high mortality rate every year. To examine for V. vulnificus, 13 samples of seawater or oysters were collected from nine sites in Yunlin, Chiayi, and Tainan. Seventy-seven strains of V. vulnificus were isolated from 11 samples. Among these environmental isolates, 72 (91%) were indole-positive, a characteristic of biotype 1. The remaining five strains although indole-negative, a characteristic previously found exclusively in biotype 2 strains, were all ornithine decarboxylase- and mannitol-positive, which has never been reported for biotype 2 strains. Based on the overall biochemical reactions obtained using a commercial identification system, these indole-negative strains appeared to be more like biotype 1. Fifty-seven ribotypes were identified among these isolates, indicating the great genetic divergence in this species. Of the 30 environmental isolates tested, 17 (56.7%) exhibited virulence comparable to the clinical isolates in the mouse, implying that a high proportion of the V. vulnificus strains in the marine environments might be pathogenic to humans. Copyright 1995 S. Karger AG, Basel