Affiliation:
1. Laboratory Services, British Columbia Centre for Disease Control
2. Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
Abstract
ABSTRACT
We assessed the ability of an in-house database, consisting of 111
hsp65
sequences from putative and valid
Mycobacterium
species or described groups, to identify 689 mycobacterial clinical isolates from 35 species or groups. A preliminary assessment indicated that
hsp65
sequencing confirmed the identification of 79.4% of the isolates from the 32 species examined, including all
Mycobacterium tuberculosis
complex isolates, all isolates from 13 other species, and 95.6% of all
M. avium
-
M. intracellulare
complex isolates. Identification discrepancies were most frequently encountered with isolates submitted as
M. chelonae
,
M. fortuitum
,
M. gordonae
,
M. scrofulaceum
, and
M. terrae
. Reexamination of isolates with discrepant identifications confirmed that
hsp65
identifications were correct in a further 40 isolates. This brought the overall agreement between
hsp65
sequencing and the other identification methods to 85.2%. The remaining 102 isolates had sequence matches below our acceptance criterion, had nondifferential sequence matches between two or more species, were identified by 16S rRNA sequencing as a putative taxonomic group not contained in our database, or were identified by
hsp65
and 16S rRNA gene sequencing as a species not in our biochemical test database or had conflicting identifications. Therefore, to incorporate the unconfirmed isolates it was necessary to create 29 additional entries in our
hsp65
identification database: 18 associated with valid species, 7 indicating unique sequences not associated with valid or putative species or groups, and 4 associated with unique, but currently described taxonomic groups. Confidence in the
hsp65
sequence identification of a clinical isolate is best when sequence matches of 100% occur, but our data indicate that correct identifications can be confidently made when unambiguous matches exceeding 97% occur, but are dependent on the completeness of the database. Our study indicates that for
hsp65
sequencing to be an effective means for identifying mycobacteria a comprehensive database must be constructed.
hsp65
sequencing has the advantage of being more rapid and less expensive than biochemical test panels, uses a single set of reagents to identify both rapid- and slow-growing mycobacteria, and can provide a more definitive identification.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Cited by
179 articles.
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