We examined the stools of 23 patients in Kolkata, who were diagnosed as cholera patients because Vibrio cholerae O1 was detected from their stools by culturing methods, and further explored by metagenomic sequencing analysis. Subsequently, the presence of the gene encoding A subunit of cholera toxin (ctxA) and the cholera toxin (CT) level in these stool samples were examined. ctxA was examined by both metagenomic sequencing analysis and polymerase chain reaction. In these examinations, two samples did not show positive in any of these tests. The metagenomic analysis showed that the genes for Streptococcus pneumoniae and Salmonella enterica were present in the stools of these two patients, respectively. Therefore, these two patients were not considered to have diarrhea due to V. cholerae infection. From these results, we predicted that some Kolkata residents harbor a small number of V. cholerae in their intestines as a form of subclinical infection with V. cholerae. Next, we analyzed the stool samples of 22 diarrhea patients from which V. cholerae was not isolated. The results showed that 3 of the patients seemed to have subclinical infection of V. cholerae based on the amount of the genes. These results indicated that subclinical infections with V. cholerae O1 occur in Kolkata.
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