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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, December 1998, p. 3689-3690, Vol. 36, No. 12
0095-1137/98/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1998, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Rapid PCR Detection of Helicobacter
pylori-Associated Virulence and Resistance Genes Directly from
Gastric Biopsy Material
Britta
Björkholm,1,2
Ragnar
Befrits,1
Bernhard
Jaup,3 and
Lars
Engstrand2,4,*
Department of Medicine, Karolinska
Institute,1 and
Swedish Institute for
Infectious Disease Control,4 Stockholm,
Department of Clinical Microbiology, University Hospital,
Uppsala,2 and
Department of
Medicine, Lundby Hospital, Göteborg,3
Sweden
Received 21 April 1998/Returned for modification 26 June
1998/Accepted 4 September 1998
 |
ABSTRACT |
We have developed a PCR-based method to detect macrolide resistance
and the virulence gene cagA in Helicobacter
pylori within 24 h, thereby improving the lengthy process of
culture-based approaches. Total DNA was prepared directly from stomach
biopsy specimens. The procedure proved to be rapid and reliable and
could be utilized for diagnostic purposes.
 |
TEXT |
Helicobacter pylori plays
a significant role in the pathogenesis of gastritis and peptic ulcer
disease. In addition, carriage of H. pylori increases the
risk for gastric adenocarcinoma (6). The factors that
differentiate virulent bacteria causing severe illness from bacteria
infecting asymptomatic carriers are not yet well defined. However, one
marker for virulence is well known, the cytotoxin-associated gene A,
cagA, which codes for a 120-kDa protein of unknown function.
The cagA gene has been shown to be more prevalent in strains
infecting patients with ulcer disease than in strains infecting
patients with gastritis alone (1, 5, 15). If host and
bacterial virulence factors associated with gastric pathology can be
defined, it may help in focusing therapy on individuals infected with
pathogenic strains or harboring endogenous constituents predisposing
for disease.
Treatment of H. pylori-associated peptic ulcer disease with
triple therapy practically always heals the mucosal lesion but fails to
eradicate the microbe in about 10% of all cases (16). Antimicrobial resistance may, in part, account for treatment failures (9). Clarithromycin, an intracellularly active antibiotic, is one of the cornerstones in present ulcer therapy (3, 11, 16). With increasing use and thereby increased risk of bacterial resistance, there is an explicit need for more rapid methods to detect
resistance among H. pylori strains (4). More than
90% of macrolide resistance in H. pylori is mediated by
either of two transition mutations (A
G) at adjacent positions 2143 and 2144 in one or both of the bacterium's two 23S rRNA genes (9, 12, 17). A transversion mutation (A
C) at position 2143 has been reported to be the cause of resistance in 7% of the resistant isolates (12). The mutations are stable, and resistance to
one macrolide leads to cross-resistance to other members of this group of antibiotics (9). Standard methods for antibiotic
susceptibility testing use culture-based approaches and therefore take
about 2 weeks.
Methods to detect H. pylori by PCR directly on DNA derived
from biopsy specimens or dental plaque have been evaluated previously (7, 8, 18, 19). Detection of macrolide resistance mutations has been performed only on DNA derived from cultured strains (13, 14). Recently, a method to type H. pylori strains with
restriction fragment length polymorphism directly on biopsy specimens
was evaluated (10).
The aim of this study was to develop and evaluate a PCR-based method
for rapid detection of macrolide resistance-associated mutations and
the virulence factor cagA of H. pylori directly on biopsy material.
Biopsy samples were collected from 69 patients (39 females and 30 males; mean age, 57 years) who were referred to endoscopy because of
dyspeptic symptoms. Sixty-three were included consecutively; four of
these had received treatment against H. pylori prior to sample collection. Six patients were chosen for inclusion separately as
possible cases of infection with clarithromycin-resistant strains. These patients had unsuccessfully been treated with omeprazol, clarithromycin, and amoxicillin or metronidazole. Patients were initially tested for H. pylori infection with the CLOtest
(Delta West Limited, Bentley, Australia) at the endoscopy unit. The
study was approved by the local ethics committee at the Karolinska
Institute, Stockholm, Sweden.
Two biopsy specimens were analyzed; total DNA was prepared from one
biopsy specimen by using the QIAamp Tissue Kit (Qiagen, Hilden,
Germany), and the other was used for culture of H. pylori according to the method described previously (9). DNA was
prepared from one single colony of H. pylori (2)
and analyzed as described above to evaluate the sensitivity of the
method. Approximately 105 CFU and an Etest strip (AB
Biodisk, Solna, Sweden) were applied onto chocolate agar plates and
incubated for 4 days before the MICs were read. The 23S rRNA PCR
followed by detection of resistance mutations and the cagA
PCR were performed as previously described (2, 9, 17).
Of 69 patients, 29 were positive for H. pylori according to
the CLOtest (2 were not analyzed) and 34 were positive by culture. Seven of the 10 treated patients were positive for H. pylori
by both culture and CLOtest. To mimic the expected clinical situation, only biopsy specimens from the 29 patients positive by CLOtest were
analyzed further. All of these patients were also positive by culture.
Of 29 biopsy samples, 17 were positive for cagA. When DNA
from the cultures was tested, 19 of 29 samples were positive. There were no false-positive biopsy DNA samples compared to the DNA from the
cultured strains.
The 23S rRNA gene fragment was amplified from 28 of the 29 culture- and
CLOtest-positive samples. The only sample where the gene was not
detected was obtained from a patient infected with a
clarithromycin-resistant strain as determined by Etest.
Seven patients were carrying clarithromycin-resistant H. pylori strains, and six of these had received treatment against
H. pylori. In addition, one treated patient was infected
with a sensitive strain (Fig. 1, patient
5), probably representing a reinfection. All the resistant strains were
found to have either of the two resistance mutations (Fig. 1). One
strain had the A2143G mutation but was found to be susceptible to
clarithromycin, which may be due to a mixed H. pylori
infection.

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FIG. 1.
Restriction enzyme digestions of samples from patients
treated for H. pylori. Numbers denote patient samples;
"a" lanes show digestion of the 23S rRNA gene with BsaI,
and "b" lanes show digestion with MboII. Mw, 100-step
basepair ladder (Pharmacia Biotech, Sollentuna, Sweden). The 700-bp
band indicates a resistant strain, since the mutation site is in the
middle of the 1.4-kb PCR fragment. Sample 1 was digested at 700 bp by
both MboII and BsaI and thus mutated in both
positions. Samples 2 and 3 were digested at the mutation by
MboII; i.e., they had the A2143G mutation. Samples 4, 6, and
7 were digested by BsaI; i.e., they had the A2144G mutation.
Sample 5 was not resistant.
|
|
Macrolides, especially clarithromycin, are widely used for the
eradication of H. pylori. Consequently, the number of
resistant strains will inevitably increase. This increases the demand
for diagnostic tools to guide the care provider in choosing the
appropriate therapy. In its present design, the method described here
detects only the two most common resistance mutations, A2143G and A2144G.
Virulence markers, such as cagA, can also be detected with
this method. As our understanding of the molecular determinants that
are associated with H. pylori pathology increases, our
method could also be helpful in directing treatment to specific at-risk patients or groups. The analyses may be performed immediately after
gastroscopy, and the treatment can immediately be adjusted for the
particular patient.
PCR-based methods should not be undertaken unless it is known that the
patient is infected with H. pylori, i.e., infection is
verified with a urea breath test or a rapid urease test on biopsy
specimens. We suggest that it be used after unsuccessful treatment with
clarithromycin or when some genetic marker of the strain needs to be identified.
 |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
We thank Per Falk and Helena Enroth for excellent assistance with
proofreading of the manuscript.
This work was supported with grants from the Swedish Medical Research
Council (project no. 10848), The Swedish Cancer Society (project no.
3523-B97-03XBC), the Nanna Svartz Foundation, and the Swedish
Foundation for Strategic Research (project no. A4J 16:5).
 |
FOOTNOTES |
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Swedish
Institute for Infectious Disease Control, 171 82 Solna, Sweden. Phone:
46-8-457 24 15. Fax: 46-8-30 17 97. E-mail:
Lars.Engstrand{at}smi.ki.se.
 |
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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, December 1998, p. 3689-3690, Vol. 36, No. 12
0095-1137/98/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1998, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
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