Genotyping of Mycobacterium leprae on the Basis of the Polymorphism of TTC Repeats for Analysis of Leprosy Transmission

Author:

Matsuoka Masanori1,Zhang Liangfen1,Budiawan Teky2,Saeki Keisuke3,Izumi Shinzo4

Affiliation:

1. Leprosy Research Center, National Institute of Infectious Diseases, Tokyo

2. and Leprosy-TB Program, Provincial Health Service, Manado, North Sulawesi

3. National Leprosarium Oshima-Seisho-En, Kagawa, Japan

4. Leprosy Study Group, Tropical Disease Center, Kampus C UNAIR, Airlangga University, Surabaya, Indonesia

Abstract

ABSTRACT The polymorphism of TTC repeats in Mycobacterium leprae was examined using the bacilli obtained from residents in villages at North Maluku where M. leprae infections are highly endemic (as well as from patients at North Sulawesi of Indonesia) to elucidate the possible mode of leprosy transmission. TTC genotypes are stable for several generations of passages in nude mice footpads and, hence, are feasible for the genotyping of isolates and epidemiological analysis of leprosy transmission. It was found that bacilli with different TTC genotypes were distributed among residents at the same dwelling in villages in which leprosy is endemic and that some household contacts harbored bacilli with a different genotype from that harbored by the patient. Investigations of a father-and-son pair of patients indicated that infections of bacilli with 10 and 18 copies, respectively, had occurred. Genotypes of TTC repeats were found to differ between a son under treatment and two brothers. These results reveal the possibility that in addition to exposure via the presence of a leprosy patient with a multibacillary infection who was living with family members, there might have been some infectious sources to which the residents had been commonly exposed outside the dwellings. A limited discriminative capacity of the TTC polymorphism in the epidemiological analysis implies the need of searching other useful polymorphic loci for detailed subdivision of clinical isolates.

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

Subject

Microbiology (medical)

Reference20 articles.

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3. de Vries R. R. P. and T. H. M. Ottenhoff. 1994. Immunogenetics of leprosy 113-121. In R. C. Hastings (ed.) Leprosy. Churchill Livingstone New York N.Y.

4. de Wit, M. Y. L., and P. R. Klatser. 1994. Mycobacterium leprae isolates from different sources have identical sequences of the spacer region between the 16S and 23S ribosomal RNA genes. Microbiology140:1983-1987.

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