Affiliation:
1. Division of International Medicine and Infectious Diseases, Department of Medicine, Joan and Sanford I. Weill Medical College
2. Graduate School of Medical Sciences, Cornell University, New York, New York
3. Division of AIDS, STD and TB Laboratory Research, National Center for Infectious Diseases, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, Georgia
4. National Institute of Public Health and the Environment, Bilthoven, The Netherlands
Abstract
ABSTRACT
The classical
Mycobacterium tuberculosis
complex (MtbC) subspecies include
Mycobacterium tuberculosis
,
Mycobacterium africanum
(subtypes I and II),
Mycobacterium bovis
(along with the attenuated
M. bovis
bacillus Calmette-Guérin [BCG]), and
Mycobacterium microti
; increasingly recognized MtbC groupings include
Mycobacterium bovis
subsp.
caprae
and “
Mycobacterium tuberculosis
subsp.
canettii
.” Previous investigations have documented each MtbC subspecies as a source of animal and/or human tuberculosis. However, study of these organisms is hindered by the lack of a single protocol that quickly and easily differentiates all of the MtbC groupings. Towards this end we have developed a rapid, simple, and reliable PCR-based MtbC typing method that makes use of MtbC chromosomal region-of-difference deletion loci. Here, seven primer pairs (which amplify within the loci
16S rRNA
, Rv0577, IS
1561
′, Rv1510, Rv1970, Rv3877/8, and Rv3120) were run in separate but simultaneous reactions. Each primer pair either specifically amplified a DNA fragment of a unique size or failed, depending upon the source mycobacterial DNA. The pattern of amplification products from all of the reactions, visualized by agarose gel electrophoresis, allowed immediate identification either as MtbC composed of
M. tuberculosis
(or
M. africanum
subtype II),
M. africanum
subtype I,
M. bovis
,
M. bovis
BCG,
M. caprae, M. microti
, or “
M. canettii
” or as a
Mycobacterium
other than MtbC (MOTT). This MtbC PCR typing panel provides an advanced approach to determine the subspecies of MtbC isolates and to differentiate them from clinically important MOTT species. It has proven beneficial in the management of
Mycobacterium
collections and may be applied for practical clinical and epidemiological use.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology