[Identification of Mycobacterium avium, Mycobacterium intracellulare, and Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex by Gen-Probe Rapid Diagnostic System]. 1991

H Tomioka, and K Sato, and H Saito, and H Tasaka
Department of Microbiology and Immunology, Shimane Medical University, Japan.

DNA probe testing for Mycobacterium avium, Mycobacterium intracellulare and Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex (MTC) was performed using Gen-Probe Rapid Diagnostic System (Gen-Probe Inc., San Diego, Calif., U.S.A.). By DNA probe test carried out blindfold for 48 mycobacterial strains with code numbers obtained from Kyoto University (Prof. F. Kuze), 13, 7, and 5 strains were identified as to be M. avium, M. intracellulare, and MTC, respectively. The diagnostic specificity and sensitivity of this testing were 100%. In this experiment, % hybridization of M. avium complex (MAC) and MTC were 25-55% and 45-52%, respectively. DNA probe test for 54 MTC strains including M. tuberculosis, M. bovis, M. africanum and M. microti revealed that 53 strains, except for one strain donated as a niacin-negative M. tuberculosis, reacted with MTC probe but not with MAC-probes. The one exceptional strain reacted with both the MTC- and M. avium-probes. However, when ten colonies randomly isolated from this strain on 7H11 agar plate were subjected to the DNA probe test again, all of these colonies reacted with M. avium probe, but not with MTC probe. Moreover, one representative colony was found to have alpha-antigen specific for the MAC.

UI MeSH Term Description Entries
D009162 Mycobacterium avium A bacterium causing tuberculosis in domestic fowl and other birds. In pigs, it may cause localized and sometimes disseminated disease. The organism occurs occasionally in sheep and cattle. It should be distinguished from the M. avium complex, which infects primarily humans.
D009169 Mycobacterium tuberculosis A species of gram-positive, aerobic bacteria that produces TUBERCULOSIS in humans, other primates, CATTLE; DOGS; and some other animals which have contact with humans. Growth tends to be in serpentine, cordlike masses in which the bacilli show a parallel orientation. Mycobacterium tuberculosis H37Rv
D015269 Mycobacterium avium Complex A complex that includes several strains of M. avium. M. intracellulare is not easily distinguished from M. avium and therefore is included in the complex. These organisms are most frequently found in pulmonary secretions from persons with a tuberculous-like mycobacteriosis. Strains of this complex have also been associated with childhood lymphadenitis and AIDS; M. avium alone causes tuberculosis in a variety of birds and other animals, including pigs. Battey Bacillus,MAIC,Mycobacterium avium-intracellulare,Mycobacterium avium-intracellulare Complex,Mycobacterium intracellulare,Nocardia intracellularis
D015342 DNA Probes Species- or subspecies-specific DNA (including COMPLEMENTARY DNA; conserved genes, whole chromosomes, or whole genomes) used in hybridization studies in order to identify microorganisms, to measure DNA-DNA homologies, to group subspecies, etc. The DNA probe hybridizes with a specific mRNA, if present. Conventional techniques used for testing for the hybridization product include dot blot assays, Southern blot assays, and DNA:RNA hybrid-specific antibody tests. Conventional labels for the DNA probe include the radioisotope labels 32P and 125I and the chemical label biotin. The use of DNA probes provides a specific, sensitive, rapid, and inexpensive replacement for cell culture techniques for diagnosing infections. Chromosomal Probes,DNA Hybridization Probe,DNA Probe,Gene Probes, DNA,Conserved Gene Probes,DNA Hybridization Probes,Whole Chromosomal Probes,Whole Genomic DNA Probes,Chromosomal Probes, Whole,DNA Gene Probes,Gene Probes, Conserved,Hybridization Probe, DNA,Hybridization Probes, DNA,Probe, DNA,Probe, DNA Hybridization,Probes, Chromosomal,Probes, Conserved Gene,Probes, DNA,Probes, DNA Gene,Probes, DNA Hybridization,Probes, Whole Chromosomal

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