Affiliation:
1. Department of Microbiology and Hygiene, Institute of Medical Microbiology and Hygiene, University of Freiburg, D-79104 Freiburg, Germany
Abstract
ABSTRACT
The biosynthesis pathway for riboflavin (vitamin B
2
), the precursor of the essential cofactors flavin mononucleotide and flavin adenine dinucleotide, is present in bacteria and plants but is absent in vertebrates. Due to their conservation in bacterial species and their absence in humans, the riboflavin synthesis genes should be well suited either for detection of bacterial DNA in human specimens or for the differentiation of pathogenic bacteria by molecular techniques. A DNA fragment carrying the genes
ribD
,
ribC
, and
ribE
, which encode homologues of riboflavin deaminase (RibD) and subunits of riboflavin synthetase (RibC and RibE), respectively, was isolated from a plasmid-based DNA library of the human pathogen
Bartonella henselae
by complementation of a
ribC
mutation in
Escherichia coli
. Sequence analysis of the
ribC
gene region in strains of
B. henselae
, which were previously shown to be genetically different, revealed that the
ribC
gene is highly conserved at the species level. PCR amplification with primers derived from the
ribC
locus of
B. henselae
was used to isolate the corresponding DNA regions in
B. bacilliformis
,
B. clarridgeiae
, and
B. quintana
. Sequence analysis indicated that the riboflavin synthesis genes are conserved and show the same operon-like genetic organization in all four
Bartonella
species. Primer oligonucleotides designed on the basis of localized differences within the
ribC
DNA region were successfully used to develop species-specific PCR assays for the differentiation of
B. henselae
,
B. clarridgeiae
,
B. quintana
, and
B. bacilliformis
. The results obtained indicate that the riboflavin synthesis genes are excellent targets for PCR-directed differentiation of these emerging pathogens. The PCR assays developed should increase our diagnostic potential to differentiate
Bartonella
species, especially
B. henselae
and the newly recognized species
B. clarridgeiae.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Cited by
58 articles.
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