Journal article

Culture-independent identification of pathogenic bacteria and polymicrobial infections in the genitourinary tract of renal transplant recipients


Authors listDomann, E; Hong, G; Imirzalioglu, C; Turschner, S; Kühle, J; Watzel, C; Hain, T; Hossain, H; Chakraborty, T

Publication year2003

Pages5500-5510

JournalJournal of Clinical Microbiology

Volume number41

Issue number12

ISSN0095-1137

Open access statusGreen

DOI Linkhttps://doi.org/10.1128/JCM.41.12.5500-5510.2003

PublisherAmerican Society for Microbiology


Abstract
Renal transplant recipients are predisposed to urinary tract infections caused by both common uropathogens and opportunistic bacteria resulting frequently in significant polymicrobial infections. In this study, a culture-independent 16S rRNA-based approach was established to identify unusual, fastidious, or anaerobic bacteria and to investigate bacterial diversity in urinary tract specimens. Similarly sized amplicons encompassing the VIS to V8 region of the 16S rRNA were analyzed with denaturing high-performance liquid chromatography (DHPLC) (WAVE System). Artificial mixtures of single amplicons from commonly encountered uropathogenic bacteria produced distinct peak profiles whose identities were confirmed by sequencing individually collected peak products. We evaluated the application of the method on 109 urinary tract specimens from renal transplant recipients; 100% correlation was found for culture-positive specimens, and DHPLC generated peak profiles. However, for culture-negative specimens, DHPLC facilitated the detection of novel peak profiles. DNA sequencing of these individual peaks was used to identify the bacteria involved. Thus, in PCR-positive but culture-negative samples the method allowed detection of previously known uropathogens such as Corynebacterium urealyticum and Gardnerella vaginalis, but also unusual agents including Anaerococcus Zactolyticus, Bacteroides vulgatus, Dialister invisus, Fusobacterium nucleatum, Lactobacillus iners, Leptotrichia amnionii, Prevotella buccalis, Prevotella ruminicola, Rahnella aquatilis, and Streptococcus intermedius were detected as single pathogens or as constituents of polymicrobial infections. The method described is reproducible and rapidly and enables both DHPLC-based profiling and sequence-based investigation of microbial communities and polymicrobial infections. A detailed understanding of infections found in recipients of renal transplants will guide antibiotic therapy regimens and provide new perspectives for decreasing the risk of graft rejection.



Citation Styles

Harvard Citation styleDomann, E., Hong, G., Imirzalioglu, C., Turschner, S., Kühle, J., Watzel, C., et al. (2003) Culture-independent identification of pathogenic bacteria and polymicrobial infections in the genitourinary tract of renal transplant recipients, Journal of Clinical Microbiology, 41(12), pp. 5500-5510. https://doi.org/10.1128/JCM.41.12.5500-5510.2003

APA Citation styleDomann, E., Hong, G., Imirzalioglu, C., Turschner, S., Kühle, J., Watzel, C., Hain, T., Hossain, H., & Chakraborty, T. (2003). Culture-independent identification of pathogenic bacteria and polymicrobial infections in the genitourinary tract of renal transplant recipients. Journal of Clinical Microbiology. 41(12), 5500-5510. https://doi.org/10.1128/JCM.41.12.5500-5510.2003



Keywords


GRADIENT GEL-ELECTROPHORESIS

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