1. Molecular and phenotypic characterization of potentially new Shigella dysenteriae serotype.
- Author
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Coimbra RS, Lenormand P, Grimont F, Bouvet P, Matsushita S, and Grimont PA
- Subjects
- Diarrhea microbiology, Dysentery, Bacillary microbiology, France, Humans, Japan, Phenotype, Polymerase Chain Reaction methods, Polymorphism, Restriction Fragment Length, Ribotyping, Serotyping methods, Shiga Toxin genetics, Shigella dysenteriae genetics, Shigella dysenteriae isolation & purification, Dysentery, Bacillary diagnosis, Shigella dysenteriae classification
- Abstract
From September 1997 to November 1998, the French National Center for Salmonella and Shigella received 22 Shigella isolates recovered from 22 different patients suffering from dysentery. None of these isolates reacted with any of the antisera used to identify established Shigella serotypes, but all of them agglutinated in the presence of antisera to a previously described potentially new Shigella dysenteriae serotype (represented by strain 96-204) primarily isolated from stool cultures of imported diarrheal cases in Japan. All French isolates, as well as strain 96-204, showed biochemical reactions typical of S. dysenteriae and gave positive results in a PCR assay for detection of the plasmid ipaH gene coding for invasiveness. No Shiga toxin gene was detected by PCR. These isolates were indistinguishable by molecular analysis of ribosomal DNA (ribotyping) and seemed to be related to S. dysenteriae serotypes 3 and 12. However, further characterization by restriction of the amplified O-antigen gene cluster clearly distinguished this new serotype from all other Shigella or Escherichia coli serotypes.
- Published
- 2001
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