A cytotoxin inducing vacuolation in HEp-2 cells was detected in 19 (3.1%) of 618 stool specimens from children with diarrhea but in none of 135 from control children. Common enteric pathogens were found in only two (10.5%) of the 19 cytotoxin-positive stool specimens. The vacuoles induced by stool filtrates resembled those induced by the vacuolating toxin (VacA) of Helicobacter pylori. The vacuolating toxin was heat-labile and protease- sensitive, and it had an apparent molecular weight of >100,000 but was not neutralized by an antiserum to H. pylori VacA. Although proper prospective case-control studies are needed to definitely assess the etiologic association between the new vacuolating cytotoxin and diarrhea, the present study suggests that microrganisms of the gastrointestinal tract produce a Helicobacter-like vacuolating toxin and may be responsible for cases of childhood diarrhea whose etiology is currently considered unknown.
CITATION STYLE
Luzzi, I., Covacci, A., Censini, S., Pezzella, C., Crotti, D., Facchini, M., … Caprioli, A. (1996). Detection of a vacuolating cytotoxin in stools from children with diarrhea. Clinical Infectious Diseases, 23(1), 101–166. https://doi.org/10.1093/clinids/23.1.101
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