Literature DB >> 11403407

Investigation of infection with Campylobacter jejuni in a man with hypogammaglobulinaemia using PCR-single-stranded conformational polymorphism (PCR-SSCP) typing.

J Moore1, M Curran, D Wareing, A Fox, N Boyd, G Glynn, B Millar, G Daly, P Murphy.   

Abstract

This study investigated several episodes of infection of Campylobacter jejuni in an immunocompromised male with hypogammaglobulinaemia, presenting with diarrhoea and bacteraemia over a 16-month period, by employing three phenotyping and four genotyping schemes, including the single-stranded conformational polymorphism (SSCP) technique to establish if infection was reinfection or persistent infection. Four isolates from blood culture and two faecal isolates of Campylobacter jejuni were obtained from the patient by direct selective plating on Skirrow Selective agar. Isolates were characterised at the sub-species level by Penner serology, Preston biotyping, Preston phage-typing, as well as E3CJC2 restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP), 16S ribotyping, flagellin (flaA) RFLP and single-stranded conformational polymorphism (SSCP) analyses. Phenotyping and genotyping sub-species analyses demonstrated that the patient was infected with at least two different strains of Campylobacter jejuni, i. e. one strain that persisted throughout the 16-month period and another strain that was transient suggesting reinfection from a different source. SSCP analysis was the most discriminatory of all the typing schemes examined and demonstrated an altered genotype of the persistent strain, whereby there were subtle modifications to the hypervariable regions of the flaA gene. Overall, as SSCP examines the hypervariable region of the flaA gene and as this technique can detect point mutations, differences between SSCP banding patterns may represent markers and thus examine mutations that occur under immune selection, thereby permitting the C. jejuni to evade the host immune response. In conclusion, this study describes the novel use of SSCP genotyping of C. jejuni and demonstrated that this method is a highly discriminatory technique which may be beneficial in outbreak characterisation, but which is not suitable to examine the clonal patterns of C. jejuni over a long period of time.

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Year:  2001        PMID: 11403407     DOI: 10.1078/1438-4221-00099

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Med Microbiol        ISSN: 1438-4221            Impact factor:   3.473


  2 in total

1.  M-cell targeting of whole killed bacteria induces protective immunity against gastrointestinal pathogens.

Authors:  Yok-Teng Chionh; Janet L K Wee; Alison L Every; Garrett Z Ng; Philip Sutton
Journal:  Infect Immun       Date:  2009-04-20       Impact factor: 3.441

2.  Microevolution of Campylobacter jejuni during long-term infection in an immunocompromised host.

Authors:  Clare R Barker; Anaïs Painset; Craig Swift; Claire Jenkins; Gauri Godbole; Martin C J Maiden; Timothy J Dallman
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2020-06-22       Impact factor: 4.379

  2 in total

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