Journal of Clinical Microbiology, May 1998, p. 1371-1377, Vol. 36, No. 5
0095-1137/98/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1998, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Department of Microbiology,
Received 17 December 1997/Returned for modification 22 January
1998/Accepted 18 February 1998
A correlation was found between the expression of a specific
Mycoplasma fermentans surface antigen (Pra,
proteinase-resistant antigen) and the site of isolation of the organism
from the infected host. Strains which expressed Pra were most
frequently associated with cells of bone marrow origin, and strains
which lacked expression of Pra were most commonly isolated from the
respiratory tract, genital tract, and arthritic joints, i.e.,
epithelial cell surfaces. Pra was previously shown to be resistant to
degradation by proteinases and was hypothesized to play a protective
role at the organism surface and perhaps to influence which host tissue
site was colonized by the organism. The methods used for this
phenotyping scheme required isolation and growth of the mycoplasma in
quantities sufficient for immunoblot analysis using monoclonal
antibodies. We wanted to determine a more rapid and less cumbersome
technique to supplement this method for determining the Pra phenotype
directly in clinical specimens. Here we describe PCR studies to
investigate the movement of a previously identified M. fermentans insertion sequence (IS)-like element. These data
showed a correlation between a specific IS genotype and the
Pra+ phenotype. Production of a 160-bp product using a
single set of IS-based primers was associated with expression of Pra.
The genomic IS location resulting in the 160-bp product was determined by using Southern blot analysis and was found to be a stable insertion site characteristic of genotype I strains. Additional analyses of
sequences within and flanking the IS insertion sites revealed another
pair of PCR primer sites which resulted in the consistent production of
a 450-bp amplicon. The stability of this site was dependent on the
absence of the IS-like element between the primer sites. The production
of this 450-bp amplicon correlated with the Pra mutant phenotype and
was characteristic of genotype II strains. The data showed that the
sequence within the IS may be unstable and that reliable genotyping
sequences are more easily found in the stable genomic sites which flank
the IS element.
*
Corresponding author. Present address: Infectious
Diseases Research, Lilly Research Laboratories, Lilly Corporate Center, Indianapolis, IN 46285-0438. Phone: (317) 277-0131. Fax: (317) 276-1743. E-mail: Watson_Harold_L{at}Lilly.com.
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