| Literature DB >> 22471518 |
Tomohiro Yamazaki1, Megumi Matsumoto, Junji Matsuo, Kiyotaka Abe, Kunihiro Minami, Hiroyuki Yamaguchi.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Although Chlamydia trachomatis is the most commonly reported pathogen that causes urogenital infection such as urethritis or cervicitis, Ureaplasma parvum and Ureaplasma urealyticum, which are commensals in the genital tract, have also now been recognized as contributors to urogenital infection. However, whether the presence of either U. parvum or U. urealyticum is related to that of C. trachomatis in the urogenital tract remains unknown. We therefore attempted to estimate by PCR the prevalence of C. trachomatis, U. parvum and U. urealyticum in endocervical samples obtained from healthy women attending their first prenatal visit in Sapporo, Japan.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 22471518 PMCID: PMC3342208 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2334-12-82
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Infect Dis ISSN: 1471-2334 Impact factor: 3.090
Primer sequences and PCR conditions used for this study
| Microorganism | Target gene | Primer | Sequence | Annealing condition; | Expected | Reference [Reference number] |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Temperature/cycle | fragment size | |||||
| Most bacteria | Forward (Bac3) | 5'-AGA GTT TGA TYM TGG CTC AG-3'* | 52/35 | nearly full-length | Horn et al., 1999 [ | |
| Reverse (Bac4) | 5'-CAK AAA GGA GGT CC-3'** | |||||
| Forward (CtOmp1) | 5'-ATG AAA AAA CTC TTG AAA TCG G-3' | 55/35 | 1,100 bp | Jurstrand et al., 2010 [ | ||
| Reverse (CtOmp2) | 5'-ACT GTA ACT GCG TAT TTG TCT G-3' | |||||
| MBA gene with | Forward (UMS-57) | 5'-(T/C)AA ATC TTA GTG TTC ATA TTT TTT AC-3' | 58/35 | 326/327 bp | Kong et al., 2000 [ | |
| it upstream region*** | Reverse (UMA222) | 5'-GTA AGT GCA GCA TTA AAT TCA ATG-3' | ||||
| MBA gene with it upstream region | Forward (UMS-170) | 5'-GTA TTT GCA ATC TTT ATA TGT TTT CG-3' | 58/45 | 476 bp | Kong et al., 2000 [ | |
| Reverse (UMA263) | 5'-TTT GTT GTT GCG TTT TCT-3' | |||||
*Y, C or T; M, A or C
**K, G or T
***MBA, 5' ends of the multiple-banded antigen gene
Figure 1Representative PCR detection images showing . N, negative control (molecular grade water); P, positive control (DNA extracted from each of the bacteria).
Figure 2Detection frequencies of .
Correlation between prevalence of C. trachomatis and ureaplasmas in the genital swabs
| Result for C. trachomatis DNA (n) | No. (%) of samples for | No. (%) of samples for | No. (%) of samples for | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Positive | Negative | Positive | Negative | Positive | Negative | ||||
| Positive (40) | 23 (57.5) | 17 (42.5) | 0.02 | 5 (12.5) | 35 (87.5) | 0.28 | 26 (65) | 14 (35) | 0.01 |
| Negative (240) | 94 (32.5) | 146 (53.5) | 20 (8.3) | 220 (91.7) | 107 (44.6) | 133 (55.4) | |||
*Correlation between these frequencies was analyzed by Fisher's exact test
Figure 3Phylogenetic trees showing the relationships between . Orange letters (B, D-G and I-K), ompA genotypes. Parenthetical percentages, the prevalence of each of the ompA genotypes. Up (blue letters), U. parvum. Uu (purple letters), U. urealyticum. Undetermined, these samples failed to amplify ompA gene fully because of DNA degradation.