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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, June 1998, p. 1729-1732, Vol. 36, No. 6
Divisions of Infectious and Immunologic
Diseases1 and
Gastroenterology,2 Department of
Internal Medicine, University of California, Davis Medical Center,
Sacramento, California
Received 12 September 1997/Returned for modification 22 December
1997/Accepted 16 March 1998
Bacteroides fragilis constitutes about 1% of the
bacterial flora in intestines of normal humans. Enterotoxigenic strains
of B. fragilis have been associated with diarrheal diseases
in humans and animals. The enterotoxin produced by these isolates
induces fluid changes in ligated intestinal loops and an in vitro
cytotoxic response in HT-29 cells. We developed a nested PCR to detect
the enterotoxin gene of B. fragilis in stool specimens.
After DNA extraction, a 367-bp fragment was amplified with two outer
primers. The amplicon from this reaction was subjected to a second
round of amplification with a set of internal primers. With these inner primers, a 290-bp DNA fragment was obtained which was confirmed as part
of the B. fragilis enterotoxin gene by Southern blotting with a nonradioactive internal probe and a chemiluminescence system. By
this approach, B. fragilis enterotoxin gene sequences were detected in eight known enterotoxigenic human isolates and nine enterotoxigenic horse isolates. No amplification products were obtained
from DNA extracted from 28 nonenterotoxigenic B. fragilis isolates or B. distasonis, B. thetaiotaomicron,
B. uniformis, B. ovatus, Escherichia
coli, or Clostridium difficile. The sensitivity of
this assay allowed us to detect as little as 1 pg of enterotoxin DNA
sequences or 100 to 1,000 cells of enterotoxigenic B. fragilis/g of stool. Enterotoxin production of all isolates was
confirmed in vitro in HT-29 cells. A 100% correlation was obtained
between enterotoxin detection by cytotoxin assay and the nested PCR
assay. This rapid and sensitive assay can be used to identify
enterotoxigenic B. fragilis and may be used clinically to
determine the role of B. fragilis in diarrheal diseases.
0095-1137/98/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1998, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Detection of Bacteroides fragilis
Enterotoxin Gene by PCR
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Division of
Infectious and Immunologic Diseases, University of California, Davis
Medical Center, Professional Building, Suite 2410, 4301 X St.,
Sacramento, CA 95817. Phone: (916) 734-3741. Fax: (916) 734-7766. E-mail: stcohen{at}ucdavis.edu.
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