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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, October 2006, p. 3720-3727, Vol. 44, No. 10
0095-1137/06/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JCM.00836-06
Copyright © 2006, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Use of a Single-Nucleotide Polymorphism Genotyping System To Demonstrate the Unique Epidemiology of Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus aureus in Remote Aboriginal Communities
Malcolm McDonald,1,3*
Annette Dougall,1
Deborah Holt,1
Flavia Huygens,2
Frances Oppedisano,3
Philip M. Giffard,2
John Inman-Bamber,2
Alex J. Stephens,2
Rebecca Towers,1
Jonathan R. Carapetis,1,3 and
Bart J. Currie1
Menzies School of Health Research, Charles Darwin University, Darwin, Northern Territory, Australia,1
Cooperative Research Centre for Diagnostics, Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia,2
Department of Pediatrics, University of Melbourne and Murdoch Children's Research Institute, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia3
Received 19 April 2006/
Returned for modification 29 June 2006/
Accepted 29 July 2006

ABSTRACT
Community-acquired methicillin-resistant
Staphylococcus aureus (CA-MRSA) has emerged as a major public health problem in Australia,
as in many other parts of the world. High rates of CA-MRSA skin
and soft tissue infection have been reported from Aboriginal
communities. We used a single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP)
genotyping typing system based on the multilocus sequence type
(MLST) database to investigate the epidemiology of CA-MRSA and
methicillin-sensitive
S. aureus (MSSA) over a 12-month period
in three remote Aboriginal communities of Northern Australia.
This was supplemented by real-time PCR for Panton-Valentine
leukocidin (PVL) genes, staphylococcal cassette chromosome
mec (SCC
mec) typing, and antimicrobial susceptibility testing.
S. aureus was recovered from pyoderma lesions on 221 occasions
and throat swabs on 44 occasions. The median monthly recovery
rate of
S. aureus from skin sores was 58% (interquartile range,
62 to 78%), and there was no seasonal variation. Twenty-three
percent of isolates were CA-MRSA; the proportion was similar
across the communities and did not vary over the study period.
Erythromycin resistance was found in 47% of CA-MRSA and 21%
of MSSA. SNP-based typing identified 14 different clonal complexes
(cc); however, cc75 was predominant, accounting for 71% of CA-MRSA
isolates. These were confirmed as ST75-like by using an additional
SNP and MLST of selected isolates. All but one of the cc75 isolates
had SSC
mec type IV (one had type V), and all were PVL negative.
Monthly tracking of SNP-based cc types showed a highly dynamic
process. ST75-MRSA-IV appears to be unique to the region and
probably evolved de novo in remote Aboriginal communities.

INTRODUCTION
Methicillin-resistant
Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) was first
recognized as an important nosocomial pathogen in Australia
in the 1970s (
34) and remains a major cause of healthcare-related
infection worldwide (
2). More recently, community-acquired MRSA
(CA-MRSA) has emerged as a public health concern in Australia
and elsewhere (
9,
14). Classical healthcare-associated strains
(HA-MRSA) tend to be multidrug resistant and have staphylococcal
chromosomal
mec (SCC
mec) type I, II, or III, whereas CA-MRSA
strains are usually not multidrug resistant and possess the
smaller and potentially more mobile SCC
mec type IV or V (
1,
22). The genetic background of CA-MRSA usually reflects local
genotypes (
42), although some successful clones can rapidly
spread across continents and even across the globe (
27). Most
strains of HA-MRSA fall into five broad lineages that are responsible
for the majority of infections worldwide (
38). Infections due
to CA-MRSA can be seen in hospital settings, with occasional
major outbreaks (
4,
7), while HA-MRSA strains are also able
to circulate within communities (
32).
Methicillin resistance in the community setting probably arises de novo and is, for the most part, independent of the hospital reservoir. Methicillin-sensitive strains are likely to acquire the mecA gene from other sources, such as coagulase-negative staphylococci (38). Evidence suggests that this happens more frequently than previously thought (13) and is more likely in populations with substantial organism burdens associated with domestic crowding, often with frequent staphylococcal skin infection. High rates of CA-MRSA infection have been reported in people from Aboriginal communities in both North America and Australia (16, 24, 39, 43), with a reported spectrum of disease from mild to life-threatening (29). Many strains of CA-MRSA also have the virulence factor Panton-Valentine leukocidin (PVL), which has been associated with skin and soft tissue infection as well as necrotizing pneumonia and septic shock (8, 35, 42). In Australia, the presence of the PVL determinant is uncommon in Western Australian CA-MRSA clones but is found in those derived from the southwest Pacific and southern Queensland (28, 32).
The epidemiology of CA-MRSA and methicillin-sensitive Staphylococcus aureus (MSSA) in defined communities has been investigated to some extent, but most reports are hospital based or laboratory based and there are few community-based longitudinal studies. There has also been a lack of effective and standardized typing methods. For example, phenotyping using antimicrobial susceptibility patterns (antibiogram) has limitations, not the least of which is the mobility of resistance genes. Phage typing and pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE) are useful for investigating hospital outbreaks and have been used in longitudinal studies, but they do not lend themselves to the study of the genetic evolution of CA-MRSA. PFGE also has difficulties in achieving interlaboratory agreement. Multilocus sequence typing (MLST) uses recognized sequences in seven relatively stable housekeeping genes and is ideal for this purpose (12), especially when combined with typing of SCCmec. A major drawback is the workload and expense of MLST, making it available to only well-resourced laboratories.
An alternative approach is to use analysis of a specific set of single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) derived from an MLST database. This method has a high resolving power that can determine clonal complexes (cc) corresponding to the major staphylococcal lineages (40). When SNP-based typing by real-time PCR is combined with determination of specific virulence genes, such as those for PVL, it is both cost-effective and relatively rapid (37).
Previously, Robertson et al. (37) described a method that used the "Minimum SNPs" software to derive highly informative SNPs from DNA sequence alignments. We used SNP-based MLST clonal complex typing to explore the epidemiology of MRSA and MSSA over a 12-month period in remote Aboriginal communities of the Northern Territory (NT), Australia. This was combined with real-time PCR for PVL determinants, SCCmec typing of selected isolates, and antimicrobial susceptibility testing. We specifically set out to document the prevalence of CA-MRSA in these communities and to characterize changes in the S. aureus population over time. To our knowledge, it is the first time such a longitudinal study has been reported and the first time this technology has been used for community epidemiological investigation.

MATERIALS AND METHODS
Study sites.
The study was conducted in three large remote communities in
the tropical Top End of the NT and was part of a larger prospective
study of skin and throat infection in relation to acute rheumatic
fever (
25). The approximate community populations were 2,500
(community 1), 800 (community 2), and 1,800 (community 3). Approval
was granted by the regional ethics committee prior to community
consultation. Informed consent was obtained from the occupants
of 49 study households. We then visited households on a monthly
basis to conduct surveillance for pyoderma, pharyngitis, and
acute rheumatic fever. Throat swabs were taken from every person,
those with and without symptoms of pharyngitis, and skin sore
swabs (maximum of three) were taken from all adults and children
with pyoderma. Additional demographic information was collected,
including past history of acute rheumatic fever/rheumatic heart
disease, general skin health, and household size (number of
people per bedroom); a detailed analysis of this information
is contained in another paper (
26).
Recovering S. aureus isolates.
During the period May 2004 to June 2005, S. aureus isolates were specifically identified and characterized from swabs of all people with pyoderma. However, S. aureus isolates were only identified and characterized from throat swabs taken over a 2-month period (June and July 2004). Swabs were struck out on horse blood agar culture plates (Oxoid) in the community health centers or sealed in airtight bags with desiccant for transportation back to the laboratory in Darwin, Australia, by aircraft (25). Plates were incubated at 37°C and inspected at 24 h and 48 h. S. aureus was identified by colonial morphology and a latex slide agglutination test for detection of clumping factor, protein A, and specific capsular polysaccharides (Staphytect Plus; Oxoid). One representative colony per plate was stored in glycerol for further analysis.
Antimicrobial susceptibility testing.
Susceptibility testing was performed by disk diffusion using CLSI (formerly NCCLS) methodology (31). Resistance was determined by CLSI susceptibility breakpoints (3), and plates were read with an optical analyzer system (Biomic vision; Giles Scientific, Inc., California). A disk approximation test was used to detect inducible clindamycin resistance (3). S. aureus isolates that were resistant to cefoxitin by disk diffusion were tested for the presence of specific penicillin binding protein (PBP2) using a latex agglutination test (Oxoid).
DNA extraction.
Isolates were plated from glycerol stocks onto horse blood agar plates and incubated at 37°C overnight. A single colony was picked into 5 ml of Todd-Hewitt broth (Oxoid) supplemented with yeast and grown at 37°C overnight with agitation. DNA was extracted from 1 ml of pelleted bacterial cells using a QIAGEN QIAamp DNA mini kit according to the manufacturer's instructions, using 100 µg/ml lysostaphin (Sigma). The DNA was eluted in 200 µl of 10 mM Tris, 0.5 mM EDTA, pH 9, and stored at 20°C.
Clonal complex, nucA, and PVL determination.
MLST-derived clonal complexes using SNP sets were determined using a single-tube kinetic PCR method as described by Huygens et al. (17). The primers used in this study are shown in Table 1. A kinetic PCR uses the SNP at the 3' end of the primer and ascertains the rate of appearance of the reaction product. SNP tpi36 was included as an internal control and used to calculate the change in cycle threshold.
Real-time PCR was carried out using a Corbett Rotorgene 2000.
Reaction mixtures contained 1 µl of a 1:10 dilution of
extracted DNA, 1
x SYBR green PCR MasterMix (Applied Biosystems),
and 0.4 µM concentrations of each primer in a total volume
of 10 µl. Cycling conditions consisted of 50°C for
1 min and 95°C for 2 min, followed by 40 cycles of 95°C
for 5 s, 56°C for 20 s, and 72°C for 35 s. Isolates
assigned to cc93 were typed with an additional SNP (
aroE252)
to determine if they were of sequence type 93 (ST93). In addition,
all of the isolates assigned to cc75 were typed with an additional
SNP,
gmk159G, to determine their relatedness to ST75. Real-time
PCR was also used to verify the identity of
S. aureus isolates
by confirming the presence of the
nucA gene (
23) and to check
for the presence of PVL determinants (
40).
Identification of SCCmec type IV and V.
The presence of the MS domain of the mecR1 gene, present in mec gene complexes of type A, B, C1, or D, was determined using primers mcR3 and mcR4. Isolates positive for this region were tested for a class B mec gene complex using the primers IS5 and mA6. Isolates negative for this region were tested with the primers mA1 and mA2 to confirm the presence of the mecA gene and primers mA2 and IS2 for detection of a class C2 mec gene complex. Isolates were also tested for the presence of a type 1, 2, or 3 ccr gene complex using the primers ßc and
c and then specifically for a type 2 ccr gene complex using primers ßc and
2. Isolates that did not have a type 1, 2, or 3 ccr gene complex were tested with primers specific for the ccrC gene using primers
F and
R (19).
SCCmec typing amplification was performed using 1 µl of a 1:10 dilution of template DNA in a 25-µl reaction mixture containing 1x PCR buffer, 1 µl of each primer, 200 µM deoxynucleoside triphosphates, and 1 U QIAGEN Taq polymerase. Cycling for all primers consisted of an initial denaturation of 94°C for 1 min followed by 35 cycles at 94°C for 30 s, 50°C for 30 s, and 72°C for 2 min.
MLST of specific isolates.
MLST was performed on five selected isolates as specified by Enright et al. (11). The sequences obtained were compared with sequences at the MLST web site at http://www.mlst.net to assign an ST.
Analysis.
Laboratory data were compared to the MLST database (http://saureus.mlst.net) using a specific computer program (18, 40). Epidemiological data were analyzed using Stata 9 (Stata Corporation, College Station, Texas). Differences in proportions were compared with chi-square analysis.

RESULTS
S. aureus and pyoderma.
Over the study period, there were 429 household visits, mostly
in community 1 and community 3. There were logistic problems
maintaining the project in community 2, and surveillance was
ceased after only 28 household visits. Skin infection was common,
and 38% of children <15 years had pyoderma on at least one
occasion.
S. aureus was recovered from skin sores in 221 of
375 children with pyoderma (59%) and was found in company with
group A beta-hemolytic streptococcus on 110 occasions (29%).
The median monthly recovery rate of
S. aureus from skin sore
swabs was 58% (interquartile range, 62 to 78%), and there was
no significant difference in recovery rates between the wet
season (November to April) and dry season (May to October).
On 21 occasions,
S. aureus was recovered from multiple pyoderma
lesions from a child on the same day. There were 44 additional
isolates of
S. aureus from 513 throat swabs (8.6%) taken over
a 2-month period; these were presumably related to nasal carriage.
Antibiotic resistance patterns.
PBP2 (methicillin resistance) was detected in 23% (66 of 283) of isolates (Table 2): 22% (40/184) in community 1, 30% (3/10) in community 2, and 26% (23/89) in community 3. The rates did not vary substantially over the period of the study. PBP2 was detected in 21% (51 of 239) of skin isolates and 34% (15 of 44) of throat isolates. Six isolates (2%) were susceptible to all the antibiotics in the panel, including penicillin. A further 164 isolates (58%) were resistant to penicillin alone, and the remaining 113 (40%) were resistant to multiple agents (Fig. 1). Erythromycin resistance was detected in 47% (31/66) of methicillin-resistant isolates and 21% (46/217) of methicillin-sensitive isolates. Likewise, 44% (29/66) of methicillin-resistant isolates were resistant to clindamycin, as were 19% (41/217) of methicillin-sensitive isolates. Thirty-three of the MRSA isolates (50%) were resistant only to beta-lactam antibiotics. The antibiogram showed no cotrimoxazole-, tetracycline-, gentamicin-, or rifampin-resistant isolates, a pattern typical of CA-MRSA. The throat MRSA carriage rate of 3% (15 of 513) in this study probably reflected a substantially higher nasal carriage rate.
SNP typing and presence of PVL.
A total of 283 isolates were SNP typed and assigned to 14 different
clonal complexes (Fig.
2). A unique and dominant clonal complex
was initially identified as cc49 because of highly aberrant
alleles. These isolates were subsequently confirmed as belonging
to ST75 using data from an additional SNP (
gmk159G) and 5 of
the isolates that were typed by MLST. This clonal complex accounted
for 25% (72 of 283) of all
S. aureus isolates and 71% of CA-MRSA
(47 of 66) isolates. The cc75 isolates were found in communities
1 (20% of isolates) and 3 (38% of isolates) but were not concentrated
in particular households. We demonstrated that cc75 was resistant
to more antibiotics on the panel than other clonal complexes
(Fig.
1). Thirty-four of 72 cc75 isolates (47%) were resistant
to erythromycin, compared to 43 of the remaining 211 staphylococcal
isolates (20%) (
P = <0.0001).
Thirty-nine isolates (14%) belonged to cc93, and typing with
an additional SNP showed them to be ST93. A single cc93 isolate
was methicillin resistant, indicating that it was ST93-MRSA-IV,
also known as the Queensland clone. Most of the remaining CA-MRSA
isolates belonged to cc1, the most important member being ST1-MRSA-IV
or WA MRSA-1, or to cc30. ST30-MRSA-IV is the southwest Pacific
clone (
1). Monthly fluctuations of the three most common clonal
complexes recovered from pyoderma lesions in communities 1 and
3 are shown in Fig.
3. It can be seen that the month-to-month
prevalence of pyoderma is variable and organisms of specific
lineages ebb and flow in each community as part of a highly
dynamic process. Using the SNP typing data, it was also shown
that on only 4 occasions, organisms of the same clonal complex
were recovered from two or more different lesions on the same
person; while on 15 occasions, they were from different clonal
complexes. One child had isolates of cc6 (MSSA), cc45 (MSSA),
and cc75 (MRSA) on three separate, but concurrent, skin sores.
The genes for PVL were found in organisms of only two clonal
complexes: the four cc30 isolates and 14 (41%) of the cc93 isolates.
None of the cc75 isolates were positive for PVL (Fig.
4). Of
the skin isolates, 19 (8%) were PVL positive, compared to 1
of 44 throat isolates (2%), although the difference was not
statistically significant (
P = 0.16).
SCCmec allotyping.
CA-MRSA usually carries type IV SCC
mec that consists of a class
B
mec gene complex and a type 2
ccr gene complex (
33). CA-MRSA
isolates assigned to cc75 were tested by PCR for products indicative
of a class B
mec gene complex and a type 2
ccr gene complex.
All but one was found to have SCC
mec type IV. No product was
obtained for the MS domain of the
mecR1 gene in the remaining
isolate, indicating that it was likely to contain a class C2
mec gene complex, typical of type V SCC
mec. This was established
with primers specific for class C2. The isolate also failed
to provide a product indicative of a
ccr gene complex of types
1, 2, and 3. However, it was shown to contain a
ccrC gene, using
the primers

F and

R, confirming it as having SCC
mec type V.
MLST results.
Five isolates were selected from the most common SNP profile group. These isolates were found to closely match ST75 on the MLST database, with variations in 2 of the 7 genes. Variations in allele sequences were found for arcC and pta loci in four of five isolates. MLST sequencing of these isolates proved to be problematic because alleles at the aroE, glpF, and yqiL loci were far removed from other known alleles at these loci. ST-75 appears to be phylogenetically remote from other S. aureus isolates. The great majority of S. aureus MLST alleles are 97% similar or greater. However, the similarity of ST-75 alleles with other alleles ranges from 90 to 95%. The only exception to this is the aroE3 allele. This is common in the database and very similar to other alleles. Our current model is that ST-75 diverged from other S. aureus clones much earlier than the major clones diverged from each other, but there has been one recent horizontal gene transfer event that resulted in the common aroE3 allele being introduced into the clone.

DISCUSSION
Most CA-MRSA infections that occur in communities are skin and
soft tissue infections; occasionally they can be severe, resulting
in necrotizing pneumonia and septicemia (
29,
35). Endemic CA-MRSA
also has the potential for repeated introduction into the healthcare
setting (
7,
21). To our knowledge, there have been no previously
published longitudinal studies of methicillin resistance in
CA-MSSA infections in Australian Aboriginal or even non-Aboriginal
communities. The findings are disquieting, with 23% of the isolates
being methicillin resistant, and have important implications
for future antibiotic prescribing guidelines in the region and
across tropical Australia. Likewise, the high rates of resistance
to erythromycin and clindamycin give little cause for comfort.
Reports from Western Australian more than 20 years ago were among the first in the world to raise the alarm about CA-MRSA (41). These Western Australian strains have subsequently spread to other parts of the country and beyond (14). Important clonal groups of MRSA in Australia now include the Western Australian group (primarily cc1 also called WA MRSA), the Southwest Pacific group (cc30), the Queensland group (cc93), the United Kingdom EMRSA-15 (cc22), and the so-called East Coast clonal group, AUS-2/AUS-3 (cc239) (1, 14).
The predominant CA-MRSA cc type found in the Aboriginal communities of the Top End was cc75, accounting for 71% if isolates. This clonal complex does not belong to any of the previously described clonal groups and appears to stand alone. It also lacks the genes for PVL. The additional specific SNP (gmk159G) and MLST sequencing confirmed relatedness to ST75. ST75-MRSA-IV has appeared in a previous report from Western Australia (5), and two of these isolates are represented on the current MLST database. However, on further investigation, it appears the isolates in the report, and on the database, actually came from patients in communities of the Top End of the Northern Territory (Frances O'Brien, personal communication). It is likely that ST75-MRSA-IV is unique to the region with CA-MRSA evolving de novo in these communities, just as it has done in Western Australia.
Increasing rates of CA-MRSA were recognized in Darwin in the early 1990s (24), and the trend has continued (29), with most of the infections occurring in the Aboriginal population. At the Royal Darwin Hospital, the rate of CA-MRSA as a proportion of S. aureus sepsis increased from 9% in 1998 to 20% in 2001 (10). The majority are typical CA-MRSA strains that are not multiresistant and have SCCmec type IV (29); this corresponds with the findings of this study where multiresistant strains were not encountered. The Top End of the Northern Territory has about the same area as the US state of Texas, and the communities in this study are truly remote. Yet, there is a relatively frequent movement of people between the communities and the capital city, Darwin, and from community to community. This includes people traveling for health reasons, many of whom are admitted to Darwin's only large public hospital. There is potential for taking HA-MRSA back to communities, just as CA-MRSA is frequently transmitted to the hospital environment (24). Yet, in this study, typical HA-MRSA strains were not found in the Aboriginal communities.
The finding that 21% of S. aureus isolates from skin infection were CA-MRSA is one of the highest rates reported. The proportion of CA-MRSA associated with skin infection rose fourfold, from 4% to 17%, over 3 years in Frejus, France (8), and accounted for 11% of pyoderma in a recent study from Southern India (30). Extremely high rates, 55% of all S. aureus infection, have been reported in one Native American community (16), and an extended community outbreak has been reported in South Texas, with frequent cases of cellulitis and abscesses (36). A recent large study in Atlanta, Georgia, found that the CA-MRSA clone USA 300 had become the predominant cause of skin and soft tissue infection in the region (20). There are more than a dozen published community MRSA nasal carriage studies with rates varying from <1% in Italy (44) to 9.2% in the southern United States (6). A recent national study in the United States found an MRSA carriage rate of 0.84% (15). In our study of remote communities, the MRSA throat carriage rate of 3% (15 of 513) probably reflects a much higher nasal carriage rate.
The surprise finding of cc75 (ST75) in communities 1 and 3 highlights the regional nature of CA-MRSA. However, the communities are more than 400 km apart and in opposite directions from the regional capital of Darwin. They have markedly different languages and cultural backgrounds, and there is limited interaction between them. As distinct from HA-MRSA, CA-MRSA strains are more likely to reflect preexisting regional S. aureus lineages with local acquisition of SCCmec type IV or V (38). Indeed both MRSA and MSSA cc75 were shown to be widely circulating in these communities. Our study shows that the community profile of clonal groups was highly dynamic; moreover, different strains were often present on adjacent pyoderma lesions. One of the study limitations was that only one colony was chosen for analysis from each culture plate, where there may have been multiple types infecting the same wound. The SCCmec gene was restricted to but a few clonal groups, and the overall proportion of MRSA isolates was stable over the study period. Could SCCmec become more mobile across clonal groups with increased community antibiotic prescribing pressure? This is a question that requires urgent investigation.
MLST itself is based upon arbitrary gene fragments and would give significantly different results if different gene fragments were used. The SNP method gives a portable and unambiguous genotype that is of sufficient resolution for an initial screen of a large number of isolates and also is compatible with MLST data. The resolution can easily be increased by interrogating binary markers (17, 40) and adding an additional SNP. Isolates that appear interesting can be further characterized by full MLST, as was done in this study. This approach led to the identification of a new numerically dominant clone, an important epidemiological finding. The SNP genotyping method is simple and relatively inexpensive when compared to other typing methods such as MLST and PFGE. It can also be used to study the epidemiology of MRSA in other settings and even other microorganisms, such as Streptococcus pyogenes (37). An understanding of community acquisition and transmission should lead to more enlightened interventions aimed at treatment and prevention of CA-MRSA infection.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
We thank the families in the communities, the Aboriginal research
officers, the community councils, and community health center
staff for their participation and support. Murin Air (NT) and
Western Pathology provided assistance with transportation of
specimens. Christopher Pearce, Department of Microbiology, Royal
Children's Hospital performed the antibiotic susceptibility
testing.
The study was supported by grants from the National Heart Foundation of Australia (no. PB 02 M 0996), the National Health and Medical Research Council (no. ID 251690), and the Cooperative Research Centre for Aboriginal Health.
F.H., P.M.G., J.I.-B., and A.J.S. are inventors of a patent describing bacterial genotyping (assessing data sets PCT/AU03/00320) and may be eligible for royalties resulting from the sale of the patent. Otherwise, the authors have no conflict of interest.

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Menzies School of Health Research, P.O. Box 41096, Casuarina, 0811 Northern Territory, Australia. Phone: 61 8 89228196. Fax: 61 8 89227876. E-mail:
malcolm{at}menzies.edu.au.


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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, October 2006, p. 3720-3727, Vol. 44, No. 10
0095-1137/06/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JCM.00836-06
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