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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, Feb 1995, 402-406, Vol 33, No. 2
JM Bangsborg, P Gerner-Smidt, H Colding, NE Fiehn, B Bruun and N Hoiby
Typing of Legionella pneumophila remains important in the investigation of
outbreaks of Legionnaires' disease and in the control of organisms
contaminating hospital water. We found that the discriminatory power of a
nonradioactive ribotyping method could be improved by combining results
obtained with four restriction enzymes (HindIII, NciI, ClaI, and PstI).
Fifty-eight clinical and environmental L. pneumophila strains including
geographically unrelated as well as epidemiologically connected isolates
were investigated. Epidemiologically related strains had the same ribotypes
independent of the combinations of enzymes used. Some strains belonging to
the same serogroup were assigned to different ribotypes, and some ribotypes
contained members of different serogroups, indicating, as others have
found, that serogroup and genotype are not always related. The
discriminatory power of the method was estimated by calculating an index of
discrimination (ID) for individual enzymes and combinations thereof. The
combined result with all four enzymes was highly discriminatory (ID =
0.97), but results for three enzymes also yielded ID values acceptable for
epidemiological purposes. In addition, the testing of 27 type strains and 6
clinical isolates representing Legionella species other than L. pneumophila
indicated that ribotyping might be of value for species identification
within this genus, as previously suggested.
Copyright © 1995 by the American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Restriction fragment length polymorphism of rRNA genes for molecular typing of members of the family Legionellaceae
Department of Clinical Microbiology, Statens Seruminstitut, Copenhagen, Denmark.
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