When administered for seven consecutive days shortly after birth, the probiotic bacterium ATCC 202195 plus fructooligosaccharide (FOS) was reported to reduce sepsis and lower respiratory tract infection events during early infancy in a randomized trial in India. Since probiotic effects are often strain specific, strain-level detection and quantification by routine molecular methods enables the monitoring of safety outcomes, such as probiotic-associated bacteremia, and allows for the quality of probiotic interventions to be assessed and monitored (i.e., verify strain identity and enumerate). Despite the potential clinical applications of ATCC 202195, an assay to detect and quantify this strain has not previously been described. Herein, we report the design of primer and probe sequences to detect ATCC 202195 and the development and optimization of a real-time PCR assay to detect and quantify the strain with high specificity and high sensitivity.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10783133PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/spectrum.02711-23DOI Listing

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Article Synopsis
  • The draft genome of the probiotic strain ATCC 195 (PPLP-217) is 3,368,305 base pairs long and has a G+C content of 44.3%.
  • This strain does not contain any plasmids, which are small DNA molecules.
  • It can grow using lactose, raffinose, and fructooligosaccharides as food sources.
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