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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, May 2004, p. 2234-2238, Vol. 42, No. 5
0095-1137/04/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JCM.42.5.2234-2238.2004
Copyright © 2004, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Molecular Fingerprinting of Mycobacterium bovis subsp. caprae Isolates from Central Europe
Wilfried Erler,1 Gerald Martin,1 Konrad Sachse,1* Ludmila Naumann,2,3 Dagmar Kahlau,3 Jörg Beer,4 Milan Bartos,5 György Nagy,6 Zeljko Cvetnic,7 Manca Zolnir-Dovc,8 and Ivo Pavlik5
Federal Research Centre for Virus Diseases of Animals (BFAV), Jena,1
Institute of Medical Microbiology and Hygiene, University of Regensburg, Regensburg,2
Bavarian State Office for Health and Food Safety, Oberschleissheim,3
Institute of Medical Microbiology, University of Leipzig, Leipzig,4
Germany; Veterinary Research Institute, Brno, Czech Republic,5
Central Veterinary Institute, Budapest, Hungary,6
Croatian Veterinary Institute, Zagreb, Croatia,7
University Clinic of Respiratory and Allergic Diseases, Golnik, Slovenia8
Received 6 June 2003/
Returned for modification 19 August 2003/
Accepted 7 January 2004

ABSTRACT
To study the dissemination of
Mycobacterium bovis subsp.
caprae,
79 European isolates from cattle, humans, and other hosts were
examined by spoligotyping and IS
6110 restriction fragment length
polymorphism (RFLP) analysis. Among a total of 11 different
spoligotypes identified, type C1 proved to be predominant (
n = 62). Five of the spoligotypes are described for the first
time. A total of 43 different RFLP types were identified, thus
allowing further differentiation for epidemiological tracking.
Isolates from a series of outbreaks in one village proved to
be of the same spoligotype and of identical or closely related
RFLP types.

TEXT
Mycobacterium bovis subsp.
caprae is a member of the
M. tuberculosis complex, which also includes
M. tuberculosis,
M. africanum,
M. bovis,
M. bovis BCG,
M. microti, and
M. canettii. General
interest in this pathogen, which was isolated from tuberculous
lesions in humans, cattle, goats, sheep, and deer, has been
steadily increasing since its first description (
3). Thus, the
prevalence of
M. bovis subsp.
caprae was extensively studied
in Spain (
4,
7) and France (
8). There have been several reports
about its occurrence in animals and humans in Austria (
18) and
the Czech Republic (
15,
16,
17) and also in Germany (
13), where
it is reported to account for about one-third of human
M. bovis-associated
cases of tuberculosis (
10).
Identification of the various M. tuberculosis complex organisms by spoligotyping (9, 12) is performed on the basis of the presence or absence of certain combinations of 43 spacers which are interspersed among a high number of conserved repeats in the chromosomal direct-repeat region. Additional intraspecies genetic differences can be revealed by IS6110 fingerprinting or IS6110 restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) analysis (19), which takes advantage of the mobility of insertion element IS6110 along the mycobacterial chromosome.
The combination of spoligotyping and IS6100 RFLP can be expected to improve the possibilities of revealing epidemiological relationships because of the different discriminatory potential of both methods (18). Recent studies of serial isolates of M. tuberculosis clearly showed that due to the relatively frequent occurrence of IS6110 transposition events, IS6100 RFLP patterns were more likely to change within a few years of a strain's appearance than spoligotyping patterns (1, 6, 20).
In the present study, 79 isolates of M. bovis subsp. caprae collected from tuberculous lesions in cattle (n = 55), humans (n = 14), wild boar (n = 7), camels (n = 2), and deer (n = 1) from five European countries were subjected to molecular typing by spoligotyping and IS6100 RFLP analysis.
The isolates described in Table 1 were grown in cultures according to standard procedures (2). Chromosomal DNA of mycobacterial strains was isolated using the cetyltrimethylammonium bromide method (12) and subjected to direct-repeat-specific PCR and hybridization with membrane-bound spacer oligonucleotides and a spoligotyping kit (ISOGEN Bioscience, Maarsen, The Netherlands). IS6100 RFLP analysis, which included PvuII digestion of mycobacterial DNA, separation by agarose gel electrophoresis, Southern blotting, and hybridization with a digoxigenin-labeled IS6110 probe, was conducted according to a previously described method (19).
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TABLE 1. Classification of M. bovis subsp. caprae isolates from different herds or groups according to genotype and host organism
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Spoligotyping of the 79 isolates revealed 11 different spoligotypes
(designated C1 to C11), the profiles of which are schematically
depicted in Fig.
1. Spoligotype C1, which is defined by the
presence of spacers 2, 17 to 27, and 29 to 38, represented by
far the most abundant pattern (62 isolates). Alongside previous
reports showing this spoligotype to be occurring in individual
European countries (
8,
10,
13,
15,
16,
17,
18), the present
data suggest that C1 is indeed disseminated throughout the continent
and appears to be the predominant spoligotype of
M. bovis subsp.
caprae in cattle and wild boar and also in humans. The closely
related spoligotype C2 (distinct from C1 by the absence of spacer
2) was detected in five isolates. Type C5, which (in contrast
to type C1) lacks spacer 32, was found three times, and type
C4 (lacking spacers 33 and 34) was identified twice. All other
spoligotypes (C3 and C6 to C11) were detected only in single
isolates. Types C2, C4, C5, C8, and C9 have been found before
in Europe (
8,
10,
13,
14,
18), but isolates of C3, C6, C7, C10,
and C11 are described here for the first time. Interestingly,
C10 [represented by the human isolate GER(H11)] is the only
spoligotype to harbor spacer 14 (Table
1).
The considerable extent of genetic diversity among the present
79 isolates was revealed by IS
6100 RFLP analysis, which identified
43 different RFLP types (designated rc1 to rc43) (Fig.
2 and
Table
1). The most prominent RFLP types among all isolates were
rc1, whose four-band pattern was encountered 19 times, and rc39
(six bands;
n = 9). Type rc10 was found three times, and rc7,
rc11, rc14, rc21, rc26, rc27, rc32, and rc37 were found two
times. All other RFLP types represented only single isolates.
Another report on RFLP typing of 10 isolates of
M. bovis subsp.
caprae (
18) mentioned six different RFLP patterns, one of which
was identical to type rc14 identified in this study.
Generally, the isolates combined in a spoligotype proved to
be rather diverse in terms of RFLP patterns. Thus, there were
29 different RFLP types among the representatives of spoligotype
C1 (
n = 62). The two isolates of spoligotype C4 were of the
same RFLP type, i.e., rc21. In all other instances, there were
as many RFLP types as isolates. A classification of isolates
according to genotype and host organism is given in Table
1.
Isolates having matching genotypes are of particular interest for epidemiological considerations. Thus, bovine isolates from herds GER(Bt12) and GER(Bt13) originating from different farms of the same village in southern Germany and collected in 1999 and 2000, respectively, both belonged to cluster C1-rc14 (Table 1). It seems obvious that an epidemiological relationship between them exists. Interestingly, Prodinger et al. (18) have detected isolates of this particular genotype from cattle and a red deer calf in an Austrian region bordering southern Germany in 1999. Therefore, it is probable that transmission occurred through wildlife, even more so as the respective herds and the deer had access to the same Alpine pasture.
The remarkable homogeneity in terms of genotypes among the isolates from five German herds of cattle clearly indicates transmission of the pathogen between neighboring farms. In this panel of isolates, 19 out of 21 were identified as genotype C1-rc1 (Table 1). There was proven contact among four of these herds, i.e., GER(Bt06) to GER(Bt09), which were all from the same village in southern Germany. A relationship to the fifth herd, GER(Bt10), which was located in northern Germany, appeared probable but was not verifiable.
An interesting genetic grouping was formed by isolates from herds GER(Bt04/Bt05) and GER(Bt12/Bt13), which harbored the closely related clusters C1-rc7 and C1-rc14, respectively; although the isolates were collected during different outbreaks in the years 1996, 1998, 1999, and 2000, respectively, a connection between them seems likely, as the herds were based in the same region.
In another case of a common genotype shared by two herds of cattle in the same region, i.e., C1-rc10 in GER(Bt03) and GER(Bt17), the time difference between isolations was 5 years, thus raising the issue of how the causative agent might have persisted during that period.
The identification of genotype C1-rc37 in both cattle HUN(Bt02) and wild boar HUN(Ss02) of the same district in Hungary indicates transmission between animal species. The infection of cattle from wildlife reservoirs was already reported from Spain (3), Italy (5), and Slovakia (11). Transmission of genotype C4-rc21 from cattle to a tuberculosis patient, i.e., from GER(Bt20) to GER(H07), was presumed but could not be substantiated by further evidence.
The relatively rapid evolution of IS6100 RFLP profiles as a result of insertion events may be the main reason for the great variety of the patterns encountered. As the transposition rate was shown to be dependent on the M. tuberculosis genotype (1), however, IS6110 fingerprinting-based epidemiological tracking over a period of a few years can be difficult in the case of rapidly evolving strains. In an investigation of the rate of change involving serial isolates from 544 patients, the half-life (t1/2) of a given RFLP pattern was extrapolated to be 3.2 years (6). Warren et al. (20) observed evolutionary changes of banding patterns in 4% of their M. tuberculosis strains and calculated a mean t1/2 of 8.74 years. They suggested that this value may be composed of a high rate of change seen during the early disease phase (t1/2 = 0.57 years), i.e., during active growth prior to therapy, and a low rate in the late disease phase (t1/2 = 10.69 years), i.e., during or after treatment.
Assuming levels of genetic variability of M. bovis subsp. caprae in the same range, the higher rate of change should apply for the present panel of isolates, as the animals did not get treatment. Indeed, rapid genetic variation during acute infection in the absence of therapy is indicated by the identification of closely related RFLP types in several sets of related isolates, namely, rc1 and rc2, rc1 and rc3, rc5 and rc6, rc11 and rc12, rc39 and rc40, and rc39 and rc42 (Dice similarity index of all pairs > 80%; data not shown). Although coinfection cannot be ruled out, the close genetic relatedness within these pairs of RFLP types suggests microevolution of the prevailing strains during persistence of the pathogen in a herd and/or upon transmission. Interestingly, two isolates from GER(Bt11), representing related RFLP types rc11 and rc12, respectively, were collected from the same cow, the latter originating from a lymph node, the site of active growth of mycobacteria.
We conclude that the combination of data from spoligotyping and IS6100 RFLP analysis provided additional insight into epidemiological processes and the evolution of genotypes of M. bovis subsp. caprae.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
We thank Albert Weber, Nürnberg, Germany, for providing
two isolates.
Part of the study was financially supported by the German-Czech governmental program for scientific collaboration in agricultural research (projects 34/00 and ME473), the Czech National Agency for Agricultural Research (grant QC 0195), and research project MZE-M03-99-01 of the Ministry of Agriculture of the Czech Republic.

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Bundesforschungsanstalt für Viruskrankheiten der Tiere (BFAV), Institut für Bakterielle Infektionen und Zoonosen, Naumburger Str. 96a, 07743 Jena, Germany. Phone: 49 3641 8040. Fax: 49 3641 804228. E-mail:
k.sachse{at}jena.bfav.de.


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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, May 2004, p. 2234-2238, Vol. 42, No. 5
0095-1137/04/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JCM.42.5.2234-2238.2004
Copyright © 2004, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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