Affiliation:
1. Bundeswehr Institute of Microbiology, Neuherbergstr. 24, Munich, Germany
2. Bruker Daltonics, Fahrenheitstr. 4, Bremen, Germany
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Francisella tularensis
, the causative agent of tularemia, is a potential agent of bioterrorism. The phenotypic discrimination of closely related, but differently virulent,
Francisella tularensis
subspecies with phenotyping methods is difficult and time-consuming, often producing ambiguous results. As a fast and simple alternative, matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization-time of flight mass spectrometry (MALDI-TOF MS) was applied to 50 different strains of the genus
Francisella
to assess its ability to identify and discriminate between strains according to their designated species and subspecies. Reference spectra from five representative strains of
Francisella philomiragia
,
Francisella tularensis
subsp.
tularensis
,
Francisella tularensis
subsp.
holarctica
,
Francisella tularensis
subsp.
mediasiatica
, and
Francisella tularensis
subsp.
novicida
were established and evaluated for their capability to correctly identify
Francisella
species and subspecies by matching a collection of spectra from 45 blind-coded
Francisella
strains against a database containing the five reference spectra and 3,287 spectra from other microorganisms. As a reference method for identification of strains from the genus
Francisella
, 23S rRNA gene sequencing was used. All strains were correctly identified, with both methods showing perfect agreement at the species level as well as at the subspecies level. The identification of
Francisella
strains by MALDI-TOF MS and subsequent database matching was reproducible using biological replicates, different culture media, different cultivation times, different serial
in vitro
passages of the same strain, different preparation protocols, and different mass spectrometers.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Cited by
110 articles.
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