
Evaluation of the Mycobacterium bovis Restriction Fragment Length Polymorphism Probe pUCD, in Combination with the Direct Repeat Probe, for Molecular Typing of Mycobacterium tuberculosis Strains in Ireland
Author(s) -
H. S. Cameron,
Rory O’Brien,
Anthony L. Murray,
B. Cryan,
R. Hone,
Mark Rogers
Publication year - 2001
Publication title -
journal of clinical microbiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.349
H-Index - 255
eISSN - 1070-633X
pISSN - 0095-1137
DOI - 10.1128/jcm.39.12.4404-4406.2001
Subject(s) - typing , restriction fragment length polymorphism , mycobacterium tuberculosis , mycobacterium bovis , biology , molecular epidemiology , mycobacterium , tuberculosis , microbiology and biotechnology , molecular probe , insertion sequence , mycobacterium tuberculosis complex , genotype , molecular diagnostics , virology , genetics , medicine , dna , gene , bacteria , genome , transposable element , pathology
A mycobacterial restriction fragment length polymorphism probe, pUCD, has recently been described which represents an effective tool for the strain typing of Mycobacterium bovis. The present study evaluated this probe, in combination with the direct repeat probe (DR), for the molecular typing of 90 strains of Mycobacterium tuberculosis from 87 patients, looking at a group (62 isolates) of nonselected samples to assess pUCD combined with DR as a general tool and a subset of 32 isolates with a common specific IS6110 strain type in Ireland. Within the group of 62 isolates, pUCD-DR identified 42 strains and was comparable to both IS6110 (41 strains) and polymorphic guanine-cytosine-rich sequence (PGRS) (37 strains) analysis. pUCD-DR was found to be comparable to IS6110 and PGRS in identifying four separate clusters of isolates which were confirmed to be clinically related. pUCD-DR divided the common IS6110 isolates into six distinct types and was comparable to PGRS (seven strain types). The usefulness of this probe as an epidemiological tool is discussed.