Cholera | |
Cholera is a disease of the intestinal tract caused by the Vibrio cholerae bacterium. These bacteria are typically ingested by drinking water contaminated by improper sanitation or by eating improperly cooked fish, especially shell fish. Symptoms include diarrhea, abdominal cramps, nausea, vomiting, and dehydration. It is treated with rehydration and antibiotics, but in severe cases, cholera can lead to death.
Vibrio cholerae causes disease by producing a toxin that disables the GTPase function of G proteins which are part of G protein-coupled receptors in intestinal cells. This has the effect that the G proteins are locked in the "on position" binding GTP (normally, the G proteins quickly return to "off" by hydrolizing GTP to GDP). The G proteins then cause adenylate cyclase A to produce large amounts of cyclic AMP which results in the loss of fluid and salts across the lining of the gut. The point of this is that the resulting diarrhea allows the bacterium to spread to other people under unsanitary conditions. Carriers of the cystic fibrosis gene are protected from the severe effects of cholera because they don't lose water as fast. This explains the high incidence of cystic fibrosis among populations which were formerly exposed to cholera. | |
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