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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, March 2005, p. 1166-1170, Vol. 43, No. 3
0095-1137/05/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JCM.43.3.1166-1170.2005
Copyright © 2005, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Comparative Typing of Campylobacter jejuni by Heat-Stable Serotyping and PCR-Based Restriction Fragment Length Polymorphism Analysis
Ulla-Maija Nakari,
Katja Laaksonen,
Maija Korkeila, and
Anja Siitonen*
Enteric Bacteria Laboratory, National Public Health Institute, Helsinki, Finland
Received 29 June 2004/
Returned for modification 20 September 2004/
Accepted 22 October 2004
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ABSTRACT
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Campylobacter
jejuni has become the most common bacterial cause of human
gastroenteritis worldwide. Rapid, discriminatory typing methods are
required to identify potential clusters of infections. The major
disadvantage of the well-evaluated and widely used Penner heat-stable
serotyping method is the high level of nontypeability. The correlation
of the types determined by the Penner heat-stable serotyping method and
PCR-based restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) analysis of
the lipooligosaccharide (LOS) biosynthesis genes of C. jejuni
was studied with 149 C. jejuni strains. Of these strains, 79
were patient strains belonging to 25 Penner serotypes, 60 were
nontypeable patient strains, and 10 were reference strains. A 9.6-kb
DNA fragment of the LOS gene cluster was amplified and digested with
the restriction enzymes HhaI and DdeI. Altogether, 39
different RFLP types (including 30 HhaI profiles and 32 DdeI profiles)
were identified. Type Hh1Dd1 was the most common type, with 36%
of the strains and strains of 12 serotypes being of this type. A high
level of discrimination was obtained, and a correlation between the
Penner serotypes and the PCR-RFLP types could be seen. Also, variation
in the LOS biosynthesis genes within a single Penner serotype was
found. Although the PCR-RFLP method may not be sufficient to compensate
for Penner serotyping, it can give valuable information about
nontypeable strains and further characterize strains of common
serotypes.
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INTRODUCTION
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Campylobacter jejuni has become the most common
bacterial cause of human gastroenteritis in many developed
countries, including Finland
(3). Human campylobacter
infections in Northern Europe have shown a peak in the summer months of
July, August, and September
(12;
http//www.ktl.fi/ttr).
Also in Finland, most domestic campylobacter infections have occurred
from July to August
[4,
19; U.-M. Nakari, M.
Korkeila, K. Laaksonen, P. Ruutu, and A. Siitonen, Int. J.
Med. Microbiol. 293(Suppl. 35):136, 2003, abstr.].
The majority of infections have appeared to be sporadic, and in most
cases the source of infection has remained unknown. Rapid,
discriminatory typing methods are required to identify potential
clusters of infections.
The most widely accepted and
well-evaluated phenotypic method for the typing of C. jejuni
strains is the Penner serotyping technique, based on passive
hemagglutination. It differentiates the strains on the basis of soluble
heat-stable (HS) antigens
(15). The antigenic basis
of the Penner serotyping system was thought to be the expression of
somatic lipopolysaccharide (LPS)
(7-10,
16-18).
However, more recent studies have found that C. jejuni strains
carry lipooligosaccharide (LOS) molecules instead of LPS molecules.
Moreover, the high-molecular-weight O polysaccharide accounting for the
Penner serotype specificity in some strains has been shown to be
capsular in nature. This polysaccharide is not linked to LPS or LOS of
C. jejuni (6,
22).
High levels of
nontypeability (up to 63%) of human isolates by the Penner
serotyping technique have been reported from some countries, but in
general, the rate of nontypeability has been less than 20%
(11). C. jejuni
is antigenically complex, as demonstrated by the presence of at least
48 HS serotypes (11). The
antisera included in commercially available serotyping kits do not
recognize all of these serotypes. In addition, the antisera are
expensive. We used a PCR-restriction fragment length polymorphism
(RFLP) method based on the LOS biosynthesis genes
(20) to study the
correlation between Penner serotypes and PCR-RFLP types and to see if
this method was applicable to typing of the strains which are not
typeable by serotyping.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS
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Bacterial strains.
A large collection of C.
jejuni strains, consisting of recent isolates from Finnish
patients submitted by clinical microbiological laboratories, was
serotyped, and 139 of them were selected for PCR-RFLP analysis (Table
1). Of these 139 strains, 60 were not typeable with the antisera used (see
below). In addition, 10 National Collection of Type Cultures (NCTC;
Health Protection Agency, London, United Kingdom) reference strains
belonging to known Penner serotypes were
studied.
Penner serotyping.
For Penner serotyping, the strains
were subcultured twice on blood agar and grown for 48 h at
42°C in a microaerobic atmosphere. Serotyping was performed
according to the Penner serotyping scheme
(15) with a commercially
available set of antisera (Denka-Seiken Co., Ltd., Tokyo, Japan).
Briefly, HS antigens of Campylobacter were extracted with
nitrite and absorbed onto fixed chick red blood cells. The sensitized
red blood cells were tested for agglutination with homologous antisera.
The Denka-Seiken serotyping kit contains 25 absorbed antisera against
the following HS serotypes (grouped antisera are given in parentheses):
(1,44), 2, 3, (4, 13, 16, 43, 50), 5, (6,7), 8, 10, 11, 12, 15, 18, 19,
21, (23,36,52), 27, 31, 32, 37, 38, 41, 45, 52, 55, and 57. Some
Campylobacter strains may react with more than one antiserum.
Nontypeable strains were called
NT.
Amplification of LOS gene cluster.
The genomic DNA
was isolated with a Genomic DNA Purification kit (MBI Fermentas,
Vilnius, Lithuania), and 200 ng of the DNA was used as the template in
the PCR. A 9.6-kb DNA fragment of the LOS gene cluster was amplified
with primers galE1 and wlaH3
(20) (Table
2). The large size of the amplified fragment placed special requirements on
the PCR protocol used. Specific amplification products were
obtained only after careful optimization (see Discussion). PCR was
performed in a 50-µl reaction volume (with a PCR Sprint thermal
cycler [Hybaid, Ashford, United Kingdom]) in thin-walled PCR
tubes. The reaction mixtures consisted of 1x reaction buffer
with 2.0 mM MgCl2 (Finnzymes, Espoo, Finland), 1.0 U of
DynaZyme Ext DNA polymerase (Finnzymes), 200 ng of forward and reverse
primers, 0.2 mM concentrations of deoxynucleoside triphosphates, 0.8 M
betaine (N,N,N-trimethylglycine; Sigma, St.
Louis, Mo.), and the template DNA (200 ng). The reaction included an
initial denaturation of the DNA at 94°C for 2 min, after which
the enzyme was added and then 10 cycles of denaturation (25 s,
94°C), primer annealing (30 s, 57°C), and chain
extension (7 min, 69°C) were carried out. In cycles 11 to 22
the chain extension time was increased by 20 s/cycle. A final
elongation step was performed for 10 min at
69°C.
RFLP analysis.
After amplification, 10 µl of
the PCR product was digested with 10 U of each of the restriction
enzymes HhaI and DdeI (Promega, Madison, Wis.) in separate reactions in
a total volume of 20 µl with 2 µg of bovine serum
albumin for 3 to 4 h at 37°C. The digest was analyzed
by electrophoresis in a 1.5% agarose gel and stained with
ethidium bromide. A GeneRuler DNA ladder mix (MBI Fermentas) was used
as a reference size marker. Electrophoretic patterns were entered into
BioNumerics gel analysis software (Applied Maths, Kortrijk, Belgium).
The types were called Hh and Dd and were numbered separately according
to their order of appearance (types Hh1 to Hh30 and Dd1 to Dd32), and
the two types were combined to give RFLP types (HhDd
types).
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RESULTS
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Of the 139 patient
strains selected for the study, 79 were typeable and belonged to 25
different HS serotypes or combinations of serotypes (Table
1). Each serotype
contained one to seven strains. Sixty strains were NT by serotyping.
The strains within the serotypes containing more than one strain
divided into one to three RFLP types (Table
1). Eight serotypes, HS
1,44, HS 21, HS 27, HS 37, HS 38, HS 41, HS 55, and HS 6,7, with two to
five strains each, included only one RFLP type. Serotypes HS 3, HS 31,
and HS 32 each included two strains and two RFLP types. Serotypes HS
10, HS 11, HS 19, HS 23, 36, 53, and HS 57 included three strains and
two RFLP types. Among the serotypes with more than three strains,
strains of HS 2 were equally divided into RFLP types Hh2Dd2 and Hh7Dd7,
whereas the predominant RFLP types (Hh8Dd12, Hh7Dd7, and
Hh1Dd1) were found in serotypes HS 4 complex, HS 8, and HS
12. HS 15 was the most polymorphic serotype: each of the three HS 15
strains analyzed was of a different RFLP type.
All strains tested
were typeable by PCR-RFLP analysis. Among the 89 serotypeable strains
(10 NCTC reference strains and 79 patient strains) and the 60 NT
strains, 26 and 22 RFLP types, respectively, were found (Table
3). Nine of these were found among both serotypeable and NT strains.
Thereby, altogether 39 different RFLP types (including 30 Hh types and
32 Dd types) were identified. Type Hh1Dd1was the most common RFLP type.
It accounted for 36% of the strains and contained strains from
12 HS serotypes (including the HS 6 reference strain and NT strains).
Four RFLP types (Hh3Dd3, Hh7Dd7, Hh8Dd12, and Hh16Dd12) contained
strains belonging to two to five HS serotypes, and 21 RFLP types
contained only one serotype, without counting NT strains. Only NT
strains were found in 13 RFLP
types.
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DISCUSSION
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We studied the LOS
biosynthesis genes of 89 serotypeable and 60 NT C. jejuni
strains by PCR-RFLP analysis. The strains were recent isolates from
Finnish patients. Ten NCTC reference strains were also included. The
aim of the study was to see if there was a correlation between Penner
HS serotypes and RFLP types, as previously described by Shi et al.
(20). We were especially
interested in finding out if this method would be applicable to the
serotyping of NT strains by genotypic means. We typed a large number of
NT strains by PCR-PFLP analysis and achieved 100%
typeability.
The large size of the amplified fragment placed
special requirements on the PCR conditions and reagents used. We used
DyNazyme EXT DNA polymerase, which is a mixture of Taq
polymerase and a proofreading polymerase specifically designed for long
PCR. At first, the amplification conditions described by Shi et al.
(20) were used. However,
no specific amplification products were obtained. Therefore, the
amplification conditions were optimized. As high temperatures damage
the PCR product during the long amplification process, it was important
to keep the denaturation time as short as possible (25 s). Also, the
elongation temperature was lowered from 72 to 69°C.
Irrespective of these optimization steps, much smearing occurred at
first. The addition of 0.8 M betaine to the PCR mixture significantly
decreased the smearing, and specific amplification products were
obtained. Betaine has been reported to decrease the smear produced by
DyNazyme EXT DNA polymerase when long extension times are used
(1). Moreover, a hot start
was found to be necessary.
The discrimination indices
(5) of the Penner
serotyping method were 0.96 for the typeable patient strains and 0 for
the NT strains. The discrimination index for the PCR-RFLP typing system
was 0.85 for both serotypeable and NT strains. Hence, the PCR-RFLP
typing system seems to be most applicable for the typing of NT strains,
whereas serotypeable strains are slightly more effectively
discriminated by Penner serotyping. However, the isolates from patients
represented a selected subpopulation, and therefore, the discriminatory
abilities of these methods might be different during routine
use.
A correlation between Penner serotypes and RFLP types could
be seen. Some typing results were very clear; for example, all HS 37
strains were Hh15Dd18, and this RFLP type was not found among the other
serotypes. All HS 38 strains and some NT strains were Hh8Dd8. However,
not all serotypes could be distinguished by PCR-RFLP analysis. For
example, the most common RFLP type, Hh1Dd1, contained strains belonging
to several serotypes.
Antisera against HS serogroups 1,44 and 6,7
are included in the Denka-Seiken serotyping kit, but individual
serotypes within these serogroups cannot be determined. The PCR-RFLP
profiles of the HS 1 and HS 44 reference strains were distinguishable
from each other, and also, serotypes 6 and 7 were differentiated by
PCR-RFLP analysis. The PCR-RFLP profiles of clinical isolates belonging
to serogroup 1,44 were of type Hh7Dd7, as was the HS 1 reference
strain, and HS 6,7 clinical isolates were of RFLP type Hh1Dd1, as was
the HS 6 reference strain.
Recent genetic analysis of the genes
involved in LOS biosynthesis has shown that there can be variation
within a single Penner serotype
(2). Our study also
demonstrated that there is variation in the LOS biosynthesis genes
within a single Penner serotype. For example, HS 12, one of the most
common serotypes among Finnish Campylobacter isolates
[21; Nakari et al.,
Int. J. Med. Microbiol. 293(Suppl. 35):136,
2003, abstr.], was divided into RFLP types Hh1Dd1 and
Hh21Dd23.
It has been demonstrated that loci for both LOS and the
capsule are present in the Campylobacter genome
(14), and the C.
jejuni HS antigens that form the basis of the Penner serotyping
system are considered to include both LOS and the capsule
(6,
10,
13,
18). It has been
suggested that some clonally related isolates share the same capsule
and LOS antigens, while other strains appear to have a common capsule
antigen but differ in their LOS antigens, or vice versa
(13). The results of our
study were concordant with this suggestion. Namely, some strains were
distinguished by Penner serotyping but not by PCR-RFLP analysis of the
LOS gene cluster, whereas some serotypes included more than one RFLP
type.
In a previous study
(20), a correlation
between Penner serotypes and PCR-RFLP types and variations in the RFLP
types of strains within a single Penner serotype were also observed. In
addition to confirming these findings, our study demonstrated that the
PCR-RFLP method is applicable to the typing and classification of NT
strains. Comparison of the LG genotypes reported by Shi et al.
(20) to our HhDd profiles
was found to be difficult, despite the use of the same primers and
restriction enzymes. Three RFLP types with identical HhaI and DdeI
banding patterns were found. Our most common RFLP type, Hh1Dd1, was
identical to genotype LG 5. This RFLP type was associated with
serotypes HS 6, HS 12, HS 21, HS 27, HS 55, and HS 57 in both studies.
Type Hh2Dd2 was identical to genotype LG 2 and was associated with
serotype HS 2, and Hh5Dd5 was identical to genotype LG 13 and was
associated with HS 19. Many more identical patterns likely exist.
Extensive and reliable comparison of the RFLP banding patterns between
laboratories would require interlaboratory standardization of technical
procedures and products, particularly electrophoretic conditions and
gel analysis software.
Although it has been demonstrated that the
HS serotype would be determined by the capsular biosynthesis-related
genes (6) instead of the
LOS biosynthesis genes, the PCR-RFLP patterns reflect the HS serotypes
at least to a partial degree. The PCR-RFLP method may not be sufficient
to compensate for the Penner serotyping method, but it can give
valuable information about NT strains and further characterize strains
of common serotypes.
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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
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We thank the clinical
microbiological laboratories for submitting the Campylobacter
isolates and our laboratory personnel for technical
assistance.
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FOOTNOTES
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* Corresponding author. Mailing address: National Public Health Institute, Enteric Bacteria Laboratory, Mannerheimintie 166, FIN-00300 Helsinki, Finland. Phone: 358-9-47448245. Fax: 358-9-47448238. E-mail: anja.siitonen{at}ktl.fi. 
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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, March 2005, p. 1166-1170, Vol. 43, No. 3
0095-1137/05/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JCM.43.3.1166-1170.2005
Copyright © 2005, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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