posted on 2008-12-16, 15:39authored byHong-Yu Ou, Cindy Teh Shuan Ju, Kwai-Lin Thong, Norazah Ahmad, Zixin Deng, Michael R. Barer, Kumar Rajakumar
The use of pathogen genome sequence data for the control and management of infections remains an ongoing challenge. We describe a broadly applicable, web-enabled approach that can be used to develop bacteria-specific polymerase chain reaction (PCR) assays. Salmonella enterica Paratyphi A has
emerged as a major cause of enteric fever in Asia. Culture-based diagnosis is slow and frequently negative in patients with suspected typhoid and paratyphoid fever, potentially compromising patient
management and public health. We used the
MobilomeFINDER web-server to perform in silico subtractive hybridization, thus identifying 43 protein-coding sequences (CDSs) that were present in two Paratyphi A strains but not in other sequenced
Salmonella genomes. After exclusion of 29 CDSs found to be variably present in Paratyphi A strains by microarray hybridization and grouping of remaining
CDSs by genomic location, four dispersed
targets (stkF, spa2473, spa2539, hsdM) were used to develop a highly discriminatory multiplex PCR assay. All 52 Paratyphi A strains within the diverse panel investigated produced one of two athognomonic
four-band signatures. Given rapid and ongoing
expansion of DNA and comparative genomics
databases, our universally accessible web-server-supported do-it-yourself approach offers the potential to contribute significantly to the rapid development
of species-, serovar-, or pathotype-specific
PCR assays targeting pre-existing and emerging bacterial pathogens.
History
Citation
Journal of Molecular Diagnostics, 2007, 9 (5), pp. 624-630.
Published in
Journal of Molecular Diagnostics
Publisher
The American Society for Investigative Pathology and the Association for Molecular Pathology