Utility of New 24-Locus Variable-Number Tandem-Repeat Typing for Discriminating Mycobacterium tuberculosis Clinical Isolates Collected in Bulgaria

Author:

Valcheva Violeta1,Mokrousov Igor2,Narvskaya Olga2,Rastogi Nalin3,Markova Nadya1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Pathogenic Bacteria, The Stephan Angeloff Institute of Microbiology, Bulgarian Academy of Sciences, Sofia 1113, Bulgaria

2. Laboratory of Molecular Microbiology, St. Petersburg Pasteur Institute, 197101 St. Petersburg, Russia

3. Unité de la Tuberculose et des Mycobactéries, Institut Pasteur de Guadeloupe, Abymes 97183, Guadeloupe, France

Abstract

ABSTRACT The present study evaluated new markers for molecular typing of Mycobacterium tuberculosis with a collection of strains circulating in Bulgaria. A study sample included 133 strains from epidemiologically unlinked patients from different regions of the country. Spoligotyping was used as a primary typing tool; it subdivided these strains into 37 types, including 15 clusters and 22 singletons. Traditional IS 6110 -restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) typing and novel 24-locus variable number tandem-repeat (VNTR) typing methods were applied to the selection of 73 strains. Discriminatory power (Hunter-Gaston index [HGI]) of these methods was found to be 0.983 and 0.997, respectively. The 73 strains were subdivided into 66 types by a 24-locus mycobacterial interspersed repetitive unit (MIRU)-VNTR scheme, 62 types by a classical 12-locus MIRU-VNTR scheme, 51 types by IS 6110 -RFLP typing, and 31 types by spoligotyping. A combination of the five most polymorphic loci (MIRU40, Mtub04, Mtub21, QUB-11b, and QUB-26) was shown to achieve a high discrimination (HGI = 0.984). To conclude, a complete 24-locus scheme excellently differentiated strains in our study, whereas a reduced 5-locus set provided a sufficiently high differentiation and may be preliminarily suggested for the first-line typing of M. tuberculosis isolates in Bulgaria.

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

Subject

Microbiology (medical)

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