1. Molecular Serotyping of Klebsiella Species Isolates by Restriction of the Amplified Capsular Antigen Gene Cluster
- Author
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Sylvain Brisse, Sylvie Issenhuth-Jeanjean, and Patrick A. D. Grimont
- Subjects
Microbiology (medical) ,Serotype ,Klebsiella ,biology ,Klebsiella pneumoniae ,Restriction Mapping ,Gene Amplification ,Bacteriology ,biology.organism_classification ,Molecular biology ,Microbiology ,Restriction enzyme ,Restriction map ,Genes, Bacterial ,Multigene Family ,Gene cluster ,Animals ,Humans ,Typing ,Restriction fragment length polymorphism ,Serotyping ,Phylogeny - Abstract
The objective of the present work was to develop a molecular method that would enable determination of the capsular serotypes of Klebsiella isolates without the use of antiserum. PCR amplification of the capsular antigen gene cluster ( cps ) was followed by digestion with the restriction enzyme HincII ( cps PCR-restriction fragment length polymorphism [RFLP] analysis). The profiles (C patterns) obtained for 224 strains representing the 77 known K serotypes showed 3 to 13 fragments ranging in size from 0.2 to 4.4 kb. A total of 97 distinct C patterns were obtained; 100% of 61 pairs of samples tested twice showed reproducible C patterns. The C patterns were K-type specific; i.e., the C pattern(s) of any K serotype was distinct from the C patterns of all other K serotypes, with the only exceptions being serotypes K22 and K37, which are known to cross-react. For 12 of 17 K types for which at least two strains were included, C-pattern variations were found among strains with the same K serotype. Therefore, cps PCR-RFLP analysis has a higher discriminatory power than classical K serotyping. C-pattern identity was observed among strains with a given K type that were collected many years apart and from distinct sources, indicating C-pattern stability. Only 4.5% of the strains were nontypeable, because of unsuccessful PCR amplification (whereas 8 to 23% are nontypeable by classical K serotyping). Three of four noncapsulated strains analyzed showed recognizable C patterns. The K serotypes of 18 (82%) of 22 recent Klebsiella pneumoniae clinical isolates could be deduced from their C patterns. In conclusion, cps PCR-RFLP analysis allows determination of the K serotype, while it is easier to perform and more discriminatory than classical serotyping.
- Published
- 2004