Weak serum and intestinal antibody responses to Vibrio cholerae soluble hemagglutinin in cholera patients

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Abstract

A soluble hemagglutinin/protease from Vibrio cholerae has been suggested to be a putative virulence factor and protective antigen. However, clinical cholera infection gave rise to detectable serum antibody responses to soluble hemagglutinin in only 2 of 10 Bangladeshi patients or 1 of 17 cholera-infected North American volunteers. A gut mucosal immunoglobulin A antibody response to soluble hemagglutinin was seen in 4 of 8 Bangladeshi patients, but in 0 of 10 North American volunteers. These responses were much weaker than those to cholera toxin or lipopolysaccharide.

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Svennerholm, A. M., Levine, M. M., & Holmgren, J. (1984). Weak serum and intestinal antibody responses to Vibrio cholerae soluble hemagglutinin in cholera patients. Infection and Immunity, 45(3), 792–794. https://doi.org/10.1128/iai.45.3.792-794.1984

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