Molecular subtyping of Clostridium perfringens by pulsed-field gel electrophoresis to facilitate food-borne-disease outbreak investigations.

J Clin Microbiol

Foodborne and Diarrheal Diseases Branch, Division of Bacterial and Mycotic Diseases, National Center for Infectious Diseases, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, Georgia 30333, USA.

Published: July 1999

AI Article Synopsis

  • Clostridium perfringens commonly causes food-borne illness marked by severe diarrhea and abdominal pain, often going undiagnosed due to its self-limiting nature.
  • Current methods for identifying outbreaks, like serotyping, are limited due to the unavailability of reagents and the difficulty in typing many isolates.
  • A new pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE) method was developed to effectively subtype C. perfringens isolates, demonstrating clear genetic patterns that can aid in tracking and investigating food-borne outbreaks.

Article Abstract

Clostridium perfringens is a common cause of food-borne illness. The illness is characterized by profuse diarrhea and acute abdominal pain. Since the illness is usually self-limiting, many cases are undiagnosed and/or not reported. Investigations are often pursued after an outbreak involving large numbers of people in institutions, at restaurants, or at catered meals. Serotyping has been used in the past to assist epidemiologic investigations of C. perfringens outbreaks. However, serotyping reagents are not widely available, and many isolates are often untypeable with existing reagents. We developed a pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE) method for molecular subtyping of C. perfringens isolates to aid in epidemiologic investigations of food-borne outbreaks. Six restriction endonucleases (SmaI, ApaI, FspI, MluI, KspI, and XbaI) were evaluated with a select panel of C. perfringens strains. SmaI was chosen for further studies because it produced 11 to 13 well-distributed bands of 40 to approximately 1,100 kb which provided good discrimination between isolates. Seventeen distinct patterns were obtained with 62 isolates from seven outbreak investigations or control strains. In general, multiple isolates from a single individual had indistinguishable PFGE patterns. Epidemiologically unrelated isolates (outbreak or control strains) had unique patterns; isolates from different individuals within an outbreak had similar, if not identical, patterns. PFGE identifies clonal relationships of isolates which will assist epidemiologic investigations of food-borne-disease outbreaks caused by C. perfringens.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC85120PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/JCM.37.7.2209-2214.1999DOI Listing

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