Affiliation:
1. Department of Clinical Sciences, College of Veterinary Medicine, North, Carolina State University, Raleigh, North Carolina
Abstract
ABSTRACT
PCR targeting the 16S-23S rRNA gene intergenic transcribed spacer (ITS) region has been proposed as a rapid and reliable method for the detection of
Bartonella
species DNA in clinical samples. Because of variation in ITS sequences among
Bartonella
species, a single PCR amplification can be used to detect different species within this genus. Therefore, by targeting the ITS region, multiple PCRs or additional sample-processing steps beyond the primary amplification can be avoided when attempting to achieve molecular diagnostic detection of
Bartonella
species. Although PCR amplification targeting this region is considered highly sensitive, amplification specificity obviously depends on primer design. We report evidence of nonspecific PCR amplification of
Mesorhizobium
species with previously published primers that were designed to amplify the
Bartonella
consensus ITS region. Use of these or other, less species-specific, primers could lead to a false-positive diagnostic test result when evaluating clinical samples. We also report the presence of
Mesorhizobium
species DNA as a contaminant in molecular-grade water, a series of homologous sequences in the ITS region that are common to
Bartonella
and
Mesorhizobium
species, the amplification of
Mesorhizobium
DNA with unpublished primers designed in our laboratory targeting the ITS region, and the subsequent design of unambiguous ITS primers that avoid nonspecific amplification of
Mesorhizobium
species. Our results define some potential limitations associated with the molecular detection of
Bartonella
species in patient samples and indicate that primer specificity is of critical importance if the ITS region is used as a diagnostic target for detection of
Bartonella
species.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Cited by
115 articles.
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