No. They are different diseases. In diphtheria you get a patch on throat. That was a serious condition. It is almost eliminated by universal vaccinaton. In cholera you get severe vomiting and loose motion.
first three that come to my mind is Cholera Diphtheria smallpox.
in humans- tuberculosis,diphtheria,cholera,tetanus,typhoid in plants-citrus canker
HIV, ringworm, and bacterial endocarditis.
Some diseases that have lysogenic conversion in humans include diphtheria (caused by Corynebacterium diphtheriae), botulism (caused by Clostridium botulinum), and cholera (caused by Vibrio cholerae). In these cases, the bacteria integrate their genetic material into the host's genome, leading to the production of toxins that cause disease.
diphtheria, cholera, hepatitis, Dengue fever etc. See related WHO link below
Receptor-mediated endocytosis
Pasteur created and tested vaccines for diphtheria, cholera, yellow fever, plague, rabies, anthrax, and tuberculosis.
yes
In developing countries you have many asymptomatic carriers of cholera to spread the same. In developed countries, undercooked sea food is usually the source of cholera.
Bacterial infectious diseases # Anthrax # Bacterial Meningitis, # Botulism, # Campylobacteriosis, # Cholera,Diphtheria, # Typhus # Gonorrhea, # Legionellosis, # Leprosy (Hansen's Disease) # Rheumatic Fever
Flu viruses enter cells through endocytosis, a process where the cell engulfs the virus in a vesicle formed from the cell membrane. Diphtheria toxin enters cells through receptor-mediated endocytosis, where the toxin binds to a cell surface receptor and is internalized. Cholera toxin is taken up by clathrin-dependent endocytosis, where the toxin binds to a receptor on the cell surface and is internalized in clathrin-coated vesicles.
can you die from Diphtheria?