| Literature DB >> 18272701 |
James C Hannis1, Sheri M Manalili, Thomas A Hall, Raymond Ranken, Neill White, Rangarajan Sampath, Lawrence B Blyn, David J Ecker, Robert E Mandrell, Clifton K Fagerquist, Anna H Bates, William G Miller, Steven A Hofstadler.
Abstract
In this work we report on a high-throughput mass spectrometry-based technique for the rapid high-resolution identification of Campylobacter jejuni strain types. This method readily distinguishes C. jejuni from C. coli, has a resolving power comparable to that of multilocus sequence typing (MLST), is applicable to mixtures, and is highly automated. The strain typing approach is based on high-performance mass spectrometry, which "weighs" PCR amplicons with enough mass accuracy to unambiguously determine the base composition of each amplicon (i.e., the numbers of A's, G's, C's, and T's). Amplicons are derived from PCR primers which amplify short (<140-bp) regions of the housekeeping genes used by conventional MLST strategies. The results obtained with a challenge panel that comprised 25 strain types of C. jejuni and 25 strain types of C. coli are presented. These samples were parsed and resolved with demonstrated sensitivity down to 10 genomes/PCR from pure isolates.Entities:
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Year: 2008 PMID: 18272701 PMCID: PMC2292959 DOI: 10.1128/JCM.02158-07
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Microbiol ISSN: 0095-1137 Impact factor: 5.948