Affiliation:
1. The University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham,1 and
2. the Alabama Department of Public Health, Montgomery,2 Alabama
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Molecular fingerprinting with the IS
6110
insertion sequence is useful for tracking transmission of
Mycobacterium tuberculosis
within a population or confirming specimen contamination in the laboratory or through instrumentation. Secondary typing with other molecular methods yields additional information as to the relatedness of strains with similar IS
6110
fingerprints. Isolated, relatively rare, random events within the
M. tuberculosis
genome alter molecular fingerprinting patterns with any of the methods; therefore, strains which are different by two or more typing methods are usually not considered to be closely related. In this report, we describe two strains of
M. tuberculosis
, obtained from the same bronchoscope 2 days apart, that demonstrated unique molecular fingerprinting patterns by two different typing methods. They were closely linked through the bronchoscope by a traditional epidemiologic investigation. Genetic analysis of the two strains revealed that a single event, the transposition of an IS
6110
insertion sequence in one of the strains, accounted for both the differences in the IS
6110
pattern and the apparent deletion of a spacer in the spoligotype. This finding shows that a single event can change the molecular fingerprint of a strain in two different molecular typing systems, and thus, molecular typing cannot be the only means used to track transmission of this organism through a population. Traditional epidemiologic techniques are a necessary complement to molecular fingerprinting so that radical changes within the fingerprint pattern can be identified.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Cited by
16 articles.
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