Affiliation:
1. Istituto di Igiene e Medicina Preventiva, Università di Catania, I-95124 Catania, Italy,1 and
2. Unité des Entérobactéries, INSERM Unit 389, Institut Pasteur, F-75724 Paris Cedex 15, France2
Abstract
ABSTRACT
The so-called
Proteus-Providencia
group is constituted at present by three genera and 10 species. Several of the recognized species are common opportunistic pathogens for humans and animals. Different methods based on the study of phenotypic characters have been used in the past with variable levels of efficiency for typing some species for epidemiological purposes. We have determined the rRNA gene restriction patterns (ribotypes) for the type strains of the 10 different species of the genera
Proteus
,
Morganella
, and
Providencia
. Visual inspection of
Eco
RV- and
Hin
cII-digested DNA from the type strains showed remarkably different patterns for both enzymes, but
Eco
RV provided better differentiation. Both endonucleases were retained to study a large number of wild and collection strains belonging to the different species. Clinical isolates of
Proteus mirabilis
,
Proteus penneri
,
Morganella morganii
, and
Providencia heimbachae
showed patterns identical or very similar to those of the respective type strains, so that groups of related patterns (ribogroups) were found to correspond to the diverse species. On the contrary, distinct ribogroups were detected within
Providencia alcalifaciens
(two ribogroups with both enzymes),
Providencia rettgeri
(four ribogroups with
Eco
RV and five with
Hin
cII),
Providencia stuartii
(two ribogroups with
Eco
RV),
Providencia rustigianii
(two ribogroups with
Hin
cII), and
Proteus vulgaris
(two ribogroups with both enzymes). The pattern shown by the ancient
P. vulgaris
type strain NCTC 4175 differed considerably from both
P. vulgaris
ribogroups as well as from the newly proposed type strain ATCC 29905 and from any other strain in this study, thus confirming its atypical nature. Minor differences were frequently observed among patterns of strains belonging to the same ribogroup. These differences were assumed to define ribotypes within each ribogroup. No correlation was observed between ribogroups or ribotypes and biogroups of
P. vulgaris
,
P. alcalifaciens
,
P. stuartii
, and
P. rettgeri
. Since, not only different species showed different rRNA gene restriction patterns, but also different ribogroups and ribotypes have been found in the majority of the species, ribotyping would be a sensitive method for molecular characterization of clinical isolates belonging to the genera
Proteus
,
Morganella
, and
Providencia
.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology