6533b828fe1ef96bd128913a

RESEARCH PRODUCT

rRNA gene restriction patterns and biotypes of Shigella sonnei.

S. PignatoCaterina MamminaA. NastasiGiovanni M. Giammanco

subject

GeneticsDNA BacterialEpidemiologyShigella sonneiDNA Restriction EnzymesRibosomal RNABiologymedicine.disease_causeDNA FingerprintingDNA RibosomalSubtypingMicrobiologyBacterial Typing TechniquesRibotypingRNA BacterialInfectious DiseasesRestriction mapDNA profilingRNA RibosomalmedicineShigellaShigella sonneiRibosomal DNAResearch Article

description

SUMMARYShigella sonneiis a major agent of diarrhoeal disease in developed as well as in developing countries. Several phenotypic methods to define strain differences have been applied to this species ofShigellaincluding, more recently, analysis of extrachromosomal and chromosomal DNA.In this study, 432 endemic and epidemic strains isolated between 1975 and 1991 in Italy, France and Switzerland were submitted to rRNA gene restriction pattern analysis, after digestion of whole-cell DNA byHincII, and to concomitant biotyping.Thirteen ribotypes, HI to H13, and five biotypes, a, d, e, f, g, were detected. Xinety-five percent of the sporadic strains were assigned to ribotypes HI to H4, which could be subtvped, except for H4, in different biotypes. Strains from each of seven different outbreaks had indistinguishable ribotype-biotype patterns. In contrast, 65 strains, isolated in Sicily in 1980 over an extended period of apparently epidemic increase of isolations and which had previously been considered to be a single bacterial clone on the basis of resistance pattern and phage type, were found to belong to two different and scarcely related ribotypes.Ribotyping and biochemical subtyping appear to be a useful epidemiological tool in studies on the circulation and distribution of strains ofS. sonnei.

https://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2271974/