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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, November 1999, p. 3676-3680, Vol. 37, No. 11
Department of Pediatric Dentistry, School of
Dentistry, Oregon Health Sciences University, Portland, Oregon
97201-3097
Received 4 May 1999/Returned for modification 1 July 1999/Accepted 22 July 1999
Recent findings challenge the assumption that pathogen-related oral
spirochetes (PROS) are related to Treponema pallidum. Treponema
vincentii, grown in OMIZ-Pat media, cross-reacted with monoclonal
antibody H9-2 against T. pallidum, and cultivable PROS had
16S rRNA gene sequences similar to those of T. vincentii
(C.-B. Choi, C. Wyss, and U. B. Göbel. J. Clin.
Microbiol. 34:1922-1925, 1996). Aims of the present study were to
determine whether antigen phenotypes of oral treponemas were influenced
by growth conditions and to evaluate the genetic relatedness of
cultivable PROS to T. pallidum and T. vincentii. Results show that three T. pallidum monoclonal antibodies (H9-1, H9-2, and F5) cross-reacted with whole
cells from four Treponema species grown in modified
OMIZ-Pat medium, but not with treponemas grown in NOS medium. Only H9-2 reacted in immunoblots with reduced proteins from cultivable PROS and
T. vincentii. Three of five PROS isolates were amplified by T. vincentii-specific PCR, and one was amplified by
Treponema medium-specific PCR. None were amplified by
T. pallidum-specific PCR. Three of five PROS isolates had
16S ribosomal DNA restriction fragment length polymorphism patterns
identical to that of T. vincentii, and the patterns of two
isolates resembled that of T. medium. Arbitrarily
primed-PCR profiles from whole genomic DNA were distinct among five
PROS isolates and two T. vincentii strains. Thus, PROS
isolates represent a heterogeneous group of treponemas that share some
16S rRNA gene sequences with T. vincentii and T. medium, but not with T. pallidum. It is proposed that
the PROS nomenclature be dropped.
0095-1137/99/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1999, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Phenotypic and Genotypic Heterogeneity among
Cultivable Pathogen-Related Oral Spirochetes and
Treponema vincentii
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of
Pediatric Dentistry, School of Dentistry, Oregon Health Sciences
University, 611 S. W. Campus Dr., Portland, OR 97201-3097. Phone:
(503) 494-8489. Fax: (503) 494-4666. E-mail:
riviereg{at}ohsu.edu.
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