Affiliation:
1. Division of Oral Microbiology and Immunology, Department of Operative and Preventive Dentistry and Periodontology, and Department of Medical Microbiology, RWTH Aachen University Hospital, Aachen, Germany
2. R. M. Alden Research Laboratory, Santa Monica, California 90404
3. UCLA School of Medicine, Los Angeles, California 90073
Abstract
ABSTRACT
The bacterial division
Synergistes
represents a poorly characterized phylotype of which only a few isolates have been cultured, primarily from natural environments. Recent detection of
Synergistes
-like sequence types in periodontal pockets and caries lesions of humans prompted us to search the R. M. Alden culture collection (Santa Monica, Calif.) for biochemically unidentifiable, slow-growing, obligately anaerobic gram-negative bacilli. Here we report on five clinical isolates cultured from peritoneal fluid and two isolates from soft-tissue infections that together constitute three separate evolutionary lineages within the phylogenetic radiation of the division
Synergistes
. One of these clusters was formed by the peritoneal isolates and had an 85% similarity to
Synergistes jonesii
, the first described
Synergistes
species, which was isolated from the rumen of a goat. The isolates from soft-tissue infections, on the other hand, formed two distinct lineages moderately related to each other with a similarity of approximately 78%. In addition, by using a newly designed 16S rRNA gene-based PCR assay with intended target specificity for
Synergistes
, we found that the dominant phylotype from a fecal sample was nearly identical to that of the strains obtained from peritonitis. Conversely, sequence types detected in periodontal pockets formed a separate cluster that shared a similarity of only 80% with the soft-tissue isolates. These findings suggest a high diversity of medically important
Synergistes
clades that apparently are unique to individual ecological niches in the human body. In conclusion, we now have available the first characterized human isolates of the division
Synergistes
which are colonizing, and probably infecting, several sites in the human body.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
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