Pulsed-Field Gel Electrophoresis (PFGE): Application in Population Structure Studies of Bovine Mastitis-Causing Streptococci

Author(s):  
Ilda Santos-Sanches ◽  
Lélia Chambel ◽  
Rogério Tenreiro
1999 ◽  
Vol 37 (3) ◽  
pp. 862-863 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kathrin Mühlemann ◽  
Susanne Graf ◽  
Martin G. Täuber

A patient had endocarditis caused by Streptococcus bovis twice 8 years apart. According to pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE) the two isolates were identical. Seven unrelated blood isolates of S. bovis yielded unique PFGE patterns. Considering this heterogeneous population structure our findings demonstrate the long-term persistence of an S. bovis clone in a patient with recurrent endocarditis.


2008 ◽  
Vol 52 (6) ◽  
pp. 1964-1969 ◽  
Author(s):  
Elia Gómez G. de la Pedrosa ◽  
María-Isabel Morosini ◽  
Mark van der Linden ◽  
Patricia Ruiz-Garbajosa ◽  
Juan Carlos Galán ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT The population structure (serotypes, pulsed-field gel electrophoresis [PFGE] types, and multilocus sequencing types) of 45 mef-positive Streptococcus pneumoniae isolates [carrying mef alone (n = 17) or with the erm(B) gene n = 28)] were studied. They were selected from among all erythromycin-resistant isolates (n = 244) obtained from a collection of 712 isolates recovered from different Spanish geographic locations in the prevaccination period from 1999 to 2003. The overall rates of resistance (according to the criteria of the CLSI) among the 45 mef-positive isolates were as follows: penicillin G, 82.2%; cefotaxime, 22.2%; clindamycin, 62.2%; and tetracycline, 68.8% [mainly in isolates carrying erm(B) plus mef(E); P < 0.001]. No levofloxacin or telithromycin resistance was found. Macrolide resistance phenotypes (as determined by the disk diffusion approximation test) were 37.7% for macrolide resistance [with all but one due to mef(E)] and 62.2% for constitutive macrolide-lincosamide-streptogramin B resistance [cMLSB; with all due to mef(E) plus erm(B)]. Serotypes 14 (22.2%), 6B (17.7%), 19A (13.3%), and 19F (11.1%) were predominant. Twenty-five different DNA patterns (PFGE types) were observed. Our mef-positive isolates were grouped (by eBURST analysis) into four clonal complexes (n = 18) and 19 singleton clones (n = 27). With the exception of clone Spain9V-3, all clonal complexes (clonal complexes 6B, Spain6B-2, and Sweden15A-25) and 73.6% of singleton clones carried both the erm(B) and the mef(E) genes. The international multiresistant clones Spain23F-1 and Poland6B-20 were represented as singleton clones. A high proportion of mef-positive S. pneumoniae isolates presented the erm(B) gene, with all isolates expressing the cMLSB phenotype. A polyclonal population structure was demonstrated within our Spanish mef-positive S. pneumoniae isolates, with few clonal complexes overrepresented within this collection.


1995 ◽  
Vol 114 (1) ◽  
pp. 153-160 ◽  
Author(s):  
E. S. Olson ◽  
K. J. Forbes ◽  
B. Watt ◽  
T. H. Pennington

SUMMARYThe results of typing of 121 strains in theMycobacterium tuberculosiscomplex by PFGE are presented. Every isolate from patients in Scotland over a 3-month period forM. tuberculosisand for 1 year forM. boviswere included along with several laboratory strains including those of BCG. The PFGE results suggest that the population structure of all the strains in this complex is distinctly simple with limited genetic diversity and also suggest thatM. bovisis not a distinct species.


1999 ◽  
Vol 37 (5) ◽  
pp. 1524-1531 ◽  
Author(s):  
Patricia Ezekiel Moor ◽  
Peter C. Collignon ◽  
Gwendolyn L. Gilbert

We used pulsed-field gel electrophoresis to study the epidemiology and population structure of Haemophilus influenzae type b. DNAs from 187 isolates recovered between 1985 and 1993 from Aboriginal children (n = 76), non-Aboriginal children (n = 106), and non-Aboriginal adults (n = 5) in urban and rural regions across Australia were digested with the SmaI restriction endonuclease. Patterns of 13 to 17 well-resolved fragments (size range, ∼8 to 500 kb) defining 67 restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) types were found. Two types predominated. One type (n = 37) accounted for 35 (46%) of the isolates from Aboriginals and 2 (2%) of the isolates from non-Aboriginals, and the other type (n = 41) accounted for 2 (3%) of the isolates from Aboriginals and 39 (35%) of the isolates from non-Aboriginals. Clustering revealed seven groups at a genetic distance of ∼50% similarity in a tree-like dendrogram. They included two highly divergent groups representing 50 (66%) isolates from Aboriginals and 6 (5%) isolates from non-Aboriginals and another genetically distinct group representing 7 (9%) isolates from Aboriginals and 81 (73%) isolates from non-Aboriginals. The results showed a heterogeneous clonal population structure, with the isolates of two types accounting for 42% of the sample. There was no association between RFLP type and the diagnosis of meningitis or epiglottitis, age, sex, date of collection, or geographic location, but there was a strong association between the origin of isolates from Aboriginal children and RFLP type F2a and the origin of isolates from non-Aboriginal children and RFLP type A8b. The methodology discriminated well among the isolates (D = 0.91) and will be useful for the monitoring of postvaccine isolates of H. influenzae type b.


Microbiology ◽  
2010 ◽  
Vol 156 (6) ◽  
pp. 1795-1804 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mateo San José ◽  
M. Rosario Rodicio ◽  
M. ángeles Argudín ◽  
M. Carmen Mendoza ◽  
Ana J. González

One hundred and twenty pathogenic isolates of Pseudomonas syringae pv. phaseolicola recovered in Spain were subjected to biochemical and genomic typing, and investigated for virulence gene complement. Fifty-six were recovered from common beans (Phaseolus vulgaris) of the type Granja Asturiana, grown in a northern Spanish region (Asturias), and 64 from other common beans cultured in the neighbouring region of Castilla y León. Typing by PmeI digestion followed by pulsed-field gel electrophoresis revealed 27 profiles, with only three being common to both regions. Relationships between profiles distributed the isolates into two clusters: A (subdivided into subclusters A1 and A2) and B. Cluster A included all isolates from Granja Asturiana and about a quarter of the isolates from Castilla y León. Isolates from cluster A were negative for mannitol utilization and hybridized to probes for the argK–tox region responsible for phaseolotoxin production. Isolates that grouped in cluster B, which were only found in Castilla y León, were able to utilize mannitol but did not hybridize to probes for the argK–tox region. Separation of the isolates into three genomic groups, subsequently termed PphA1, PphA2 and PphB, was also supported by effector gene complement and location. In PphB, all effector genes tested (hopX1, hopF1, avrB2 and avrD1) mapped on chromosomal fragments, but faint hybridization of avrB2 with plasmids of about 40 kb was also observed. In PphA hopX1 mapped on the chromosome; in PphA1 avrB2 and avrD1 were carried on virulence plasmids (most of approx. 125 kb) and hopF1 was not detected, while in PphA2 the three genes were located on plasmids (approx. 75–160 kb). These results can be used as a framework to investigate the basis of regional variation in population structure, and for further epidemiological surveillance of P. syringae pv. phaseolicola.


2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (3) ◽  
pp. 602-610
Author(s):  
Eugene Y. H. Yeung ◽  
Ivan Gorn

Pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE) has historically been considered the gold standard in fingerprinting bacterial strains in epidemiological studies and outbreak investigations; little is known regarding its use in individual clinical cases. The current study detailed two clinical cases in which PFGE helped to determine the source of their methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) bacteremia. Patient A was found to have MRSA bacteremia after trauma in her pelvic area. MRSA was also found in her groin but not in her nostril and rectum. PFGE was performed that showed variable bands of her MRSA isolates from blood and groin, suggestive of different strains of MRSA. Her MRSA bacteremia was determined to be unrelated to her pelvic trauma. Patient B was found to have MRSA bacteremia after colonoscopy. MRSA was also found in his nostril and rectum. PFGE was performed that showed variable bands of his MRSA isolates from blood and rectum but identical bands of MRSA isolates from his blood and nostril. His MRSA bacteremia was determined to be unrelated to his colonoscopy procedure. The current study demonstrates the use of PFGE to rule out the source of bacteremia in individual clinical cases.


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