Use of 16S Ribosomal DNA PCR and Denaturing Gradient Gel Electrophoresis for Analysis of the Microfloras of Healing and Nonhealing Chronic Venous Leg Ulcers

Author:

Davies Charlotte E.12,Hill Katja E.12,Wilson Melanie J.2,Stephens Phil123,Hill C. Michael2,Harding Keith G.43,Thomas David W.123

Affiliation:

1. Wound Biology Group

2. Department of Oral Surgery, Medicine and Pathology

3. Department of Surgery, and Cardiff Institute of Tissue Engineering and Repair, University of Wales College of Medicine, Cardiff CF14 4XY, United Kingdom

4. Wound Healing Research Unit

Abstract

ABSTRACT The bacterial microfloras of 8 healing and 10 nonhealing chronic venous leg ulcers were compared by using a combination of cultural analysis and denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis (DGGE) of PCR-amplified 16S rRNA gene products. Cultural analysis of the microflora revealed that the majority of both wound types carried the aerobes Staphylococcus and Pseudomonas spp. (89 and 80%, respectively). Sequencing of 16S ribosomal DNAs selected on the basis of DGGE profiling allowed the identification of strains not detected by cultural means. Of considerable interest was the finding that more than 40% of the sequences represented organisms not cultured from the wound from which they were amplified. DGGE profiles also revealed that all of the wounds possessed one apparently common band, identified by sequencing as Pseudomonas sp. The intensity of this PCR signal suggested that the bacterial load of nonhealing wounds was much higher for pseudomonads compared to healing wounds and that it may have been significantly underestimated by cultural analysis. Hence, the present study shows that DGGE could give valuable additional information about chronic wound microflora that is not apparent from cultural analysis alone.

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

Subject

Microbiology (medical)

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