| Literature DB >> 24902856 |
Melanie W Syrmis, Timothy J Kidd, Ralf J Moser, Kay A Ramsay, Kristen M Gibson, Snehal Anuj, Scott C Bell, Claire E Wainwright, Keith Grimwood, Michael Nissen, Theo P Sloots, David M Whiley1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Molecular typing is integral for identifying Pseudomonas aeruginosa strains that may be shared between patients with cystic fibrosis (CF). We conducted a side-by-side comparison of two P. aeruginosa genotyping methods utilising informative-single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) methods; one targeting 10 P. aeruginosa SNPs and using real-time polymerase chain reaction technology (HRM10SNP) and the other targeting 20 SNPs and based on the Sequenom MassARRAY platform (iPLEX20SNP).Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24902856 PMCID: PMC4053291 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2334-14-307
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Infect Dis ISSN: 1471-2334 Impact factor: 3.090
Primers for primary PCR reaction for the iPLEX20SNP
| 7 and 45 | P1 10mer-ACCTTGTGCTTGTCGATGAT | |
| P2 10mer-GCCACACCTACATCGTCTAT | ||
| 322, 381 and 387 | P1 10mer-ATCAGGTTGCCGAGGTTGTC | |
| P2 10mer-AGACCGGCGCCTGCCTGATG | ||
| 416 and 488 | P1 10mer-TCGGTGTTGTCGCCGCGCAG | |
| P2 10mer-CAATGTCACCGTGCCGTTCA | ||
| 881 | P1 10mer-CAGAGGAAGAATGCCTCGG | |
| P2 10mer-CGACATGATGTATGCCAAGG | ||
| 894 and 937 | P1 10mer-AACATCGTCGACGACGCCAT | |
| P2 10mer-AACACGCAGGTCAGTTGGTC | ||
| 1086 and 1152 | P1 10mer-GGCGAGGAACTTCACGTCCTG | |
| P2 10mer-ATGGGCGTGAAGGTGATCCG | ||
| 1297 | P1 10mer-AGAAGACCGAGTTCGACCAT | |
| P2 10mer-AAGATGGTCTTGCCGTTGTG | ||
| 1465 | P1 10mer-ACCAGCTTGTCGCGCACCAT | |
| P2 10mer-AGCGCAACGGCCTGCACCT | ||
| 1865 and 1958 | P1 10mer-TACAGCAGGTGGTTCAGGAT | |
| P2 10mer-AAGATGGCCGAGCGCCAGT | ||
| 2169 and 2208 | P1 10mer-AGAGAAGGGGACCGTCCTG | |
| P2 10mer-ACCTTGTCCATTTCCGACAC | ||
| 2337 | P1 10mer-TGGTCTCCGACATGACCGA | |
| P2 10mer-TTCGCGAGCGATGATCGCC | ||
| 2551 | P1 10mer-GGATCAACGAAGAGGCCGA | |
| P2 10mer-TCGATCAGCATCAGGTGCTC |
P1 = forward amplification primer;
P2 = reverse amplification primer;
10mer = 5′ 10-mer tagACGTTGGATG.
Extension primers used for the iPLEX20SNP
| 7 | ACATCGTCTATGGCCCG | 5146.4 | C,5393.5 | T,5473.5 | | | |
| 45 | ggggTCTGTTCGAGGGCGT | 5931.8 | A,6203 | G,6219 | | | |
| 322 | gggtaGCGTGGGCGCCCGGCA | 6529.2 | T,6800.4 | C,6816.4 | | | |
| 381 | ttcccAGCCGTTCTTCGGCGTGGT | 7302.7 | C,7549.9 | A,7573.9 | G,7589.9 | T,7629.8 | |
| 387 | gaaGAGGTTGTCCACCAG | 5548.6 | G,5795.8 | A,5875.7 | | | |
| 416b | TGCCGTTCAAGGAAGA | 4930.2 | C,5177.4 | A,5201.4 | G,5217.4 | | |
| aGgCGTTCAAGGAACT | |||||||
| 488 | ccCACCCTGATCCGCCT | 5027.3 | C,5274.5 | G,5314.5 | T,5354.4 | | |
| 881 | gagggTGTATGCCAAGGAACCGAC | 7451.9 | C,7699 | G,7739.1 | T,7778.9 | | |
| 894 | gTCCTCCAAGGTCCTGCT | 5426.5 | C,5673.7 | A,5697.7 | G,5713.7 | | |
| 937 | tgtTCcgCGATGGCCTTGTGCA | 6733.4 | T,7004.6 | C,7020.6 | | | |
| 1086 | gtCGAGGACAAGTTCCTCGG | 6158 | C,6405.2 | G,6445.2 | T,6485.1 | | |
| 1152 | ctcaGCACCTTCATCGAAGT | 6036.9 | C,6284.1 | G,6324.2 | T,6364 | | |
| 1297 | GTGGAAAGCCACGTCGAA | 5557.6 | T,5828.8 | C,5844.8 | | | |
| 1465 | gggCGGCtcGCACCTGTGGGG | 6520.2 | C,6767.4 | T,6847.3 | | | |
| 1865 | agagaCAGTCtcGGCACAGTTTCAT | 7666 | C,7913.2 | T,7993.1 | | | |
| 1958 | tgctGATCACGTCGACCCGCTG | 6687.3 | G,6934.5 | C,6974.5 | | | |
| 2169 | ccggaGCGCTGGCCGATGGCACG | 7091.6 | G,7338.8 | T,7362.8 | C,7378.8 | A,7418.7 | |
| 2208 | CCGACACGTCGTTGATCAC | 5748.7 | G,5995.9 | A,6075.8 | | | |
| 2337 | CGCCGCGTGGCAGGT | 4610 | T,4881.2 | C,4897.2 | | | |
| 2551 | CAGATCCTGCTCCAG | 4512.9 | G,4760.1 | C,4800.2 | A,4840 |
Non-template bases are indicated in lower case. Mass (Daltons) is provided for the unextended extension primer (UEP), as well as associated extension products (EP) 1, 2 and where relevant 3 and 4.
aSNP position is based on the 2882 bp concatenated sequence.
bNote that SNP 416 had two extension primers to accommodate a known proximal SNP variation.
MLST data from the MLST database website (13 December 2012) and associated SNP profiles for STs of national and international importance
| CGTCGACTACCTCCCCGGTA | 1 | | |
| TGCAAGCTACCTTCCCGGTA | 1 | | |
| TGCAAGCTCCCCTTTGGGCG | 2 | 2/2 = SLVs | |
| TGCCGGCTATCCCCCCGACA | 787, | 2 | 2/2 = SLVs |
| TGTCGGCTACCTTTCGGGTA | 209, 268, | 12 | 12/12 = SLVs |
| CGCAAGCTATCCCCCGGGTG | 4, | 3 | 2/3 = SLVs |
| CGCAAGCTATCCCCCCGGCA | 3 | 3/3 = SLVs | |
| CGCAGGGCCCCCTTCGGGCG | 4 | 4/4 = SLVs | |
| CGCCGGCTCCCCCCCCGACA | 3 | 3/3 = SLVs | |
| TGCAAGCTACCCCCTGGACA | 13, | 10 | 10/10 = SLVs |
| CGCAAGCTACCTCCCCGGTA | 384, | 2 | |
| CGCAGGCTACCTCCTGGGTG | 2 | 2/2 = SLVs | |
| TGCCGGCTCCCCCCTGGGCA | 554, | 2 | 2/2 = SLVs |
| CGCAGGCTACCTCCCCGGTA | 589, 791, | 3 | 3/3 = SLVs |
| TGCCGGCTATCCCCCCGGCA | 2 | 2/2 = SLVs | |
| CGCAAGCTACCTCCCCAGTA | 3 | 3/3 = SLVs | |
| CGCAGGCTACCTTCCCGGTA | 1 | | |
| CGCAAGGTACCTCCTGGGCG | 1 | | |
| CGCAAGGTCCCCCCCGGGTG | 1 | | |
| CGTCGGCTATCCTTCCGGTA | 10 | 9/10 = SLVs | |
| CGCAAGCTACTCTCCCGGTG | 2 | | |
| CGTCGGCTATCCCCTGGGCA | 398, 399, 401, | 4 | 3/4 = SLVs |
| CGTCGGCCACTCTTCCGGCG | 2 | 2/2 = SLVs | |
| TGCAAGCTACCCTCCCGGTA | 669, | 2 | 2/2 = SLVs |
| CGCCGGGCCTCCTCTGAGTG | 1 | | |
| TGTCGGCTACCTTCCCGGTA | 2 | 2/2 = SLVs | |
| TACCAGGCCCCCTCCGAGTG | 89, 307, | 5 | 2/5 = DLVs |
| TGTCGGCCCCCCTTCGGGTA | 1 | | |
| CGCAAGCTACCTTCCCGGTA | 232, | 6 | 5/6 = SLVs |
| CGTCGGCTATCCCCTGGGTA | 169, | 2 | |
| CGCAGACTCCCCTCCCGGTA | 1 | | |
| TGCAAGCTATCCTCCCAGCG | 3 | 3/3 = SLVs | |
| TGCAAGCTATCCCCCCGGTG | 1 | | |
| CGCAAGCTCCCCCCCGGGTA | 103, 244, 441, 462, 464, 594, 766, 986, | 12 | 10/12 = SLVs or DLVs |
| CGCAAGCTATCCTTCCGGTA | 445, | 2 | |
| CGCAAGCTCCTCTTTCGGTA | 4 | 4/4 = SLVs | |
| TGTCGGCTCCTCTTTGGGTA | 2 | 2/2 = SLVs | |
| TGTCGGCTACCTCCCCGGTG | 6 | 6/6 = SLVs | |
| TGCAAGCTACCTCCCCGACG | 2 | 2/2 = SLVs | |
| CGCAAGCTACCTCCCCGGCG | 2 | | |
| TGCAGGCTCCCCCCCCAGCA | 2 | 2/2 = SLVs | |
| TATCGGGCCCCCTCCGAGTG | 65, 107, 109, | 14 | 3/14 = SLVs or DLVs |
| CGTCGGCTCTCCCCTGGACA | 1 | | |
| CGCTAGGCCCCCTCCGAGTG | 227, 230, | 9 | 9/9 = SLVs |
| CGCGGAGCCCTCTCCGTGTG | 366, 368, 1006, 1063, 1190, 1191, | 7 | 4/7 = SLVs |
| CGTCGGCTACCTCCCCGACA | 11 | 10/11 = SLVs or DLVs | |
| CGTCGGCTATCCTTTGGGTA | 4 | 4/4 = SLVs or DLVs | |
| CGCAAGCTATCCCCCGAGTA | 138, 140, | 4 | 2/4 = SLVs |
The STs consistent with recognised P. aeruginosa strains are indicated in parentheses.
aSNP profile is in the order of 7, 45, 322, 381, 387, 416, 488, 881, 894, 937, 1086, 1152, 1297, 1465, 1865, 1958, 2169, 2208, 2337 and 2551. These SNPs were derived from the sequence data from the Pseudomonas aeruginosa MLST database website (http://darwin.phyloviz.net/ComparingPartitions/index.php?link=Tool) on 13 December 2012. bMLST types available from the Pseudomonas aeruginosa MLST database website (http://pubmlst.org/paeruginosa) on 13 December 2012. cSLV: single locus variant, DLV: double locus variant. dBoldface type represents previously characterised National and International MLST types of importance (e.g., AUST-01 has the MLST type 649).
Number of types, Simpson’s index of diversity and adjusted Wallace coefficients for the HRM10SNP and iPLEX20SNP assays calculated from application to the 470 isolates providing complete SNP profiles by both methods
| HRM10SNP | 91 | 0.944 | 0.897 |
| | | (0.933-0.955) | (0.876-0.918) |
| 20SNP iPLEX | 147 | 0.947 | 0.949 |
| (0.936-0.959) | (0.912-0.986) |