Affiliation:
1. Unité des Rickettsies, CNRS UMR 6020 IFR 48, Faculté de Médecine, Marseille, France
2. Division of Viral and Rickettsial Diseases, National Center for Infections Diseases, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, Georgia 30333
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Currently, 19 species are recognized in the genus
Bartonella
, 7 of which are involved in an increasing variety of human diseases. Development of molecular tools for detection, identification, and subtyping of strains and isolates has promoted research on
Bartonella
spp. We amplified and sequenced the portion of the
ftsZ
gene encoding the N-terminal region of the cell division protein for 13
Bartonella
species:
Bartonella alsatica
,
B. birtlesii
,
B. doshiae
,
B. elizabethae
,
B. grahami
,
B. koehlerae
,
B. schoenbuchensis
,
B. taylorii
,
B. tribocorum
,
Bartonella vinsonii
subsp.
arupensis
,
Bartonella vinsonii
subsp.
berkhoffii
,
Bartonella vinsonii
subsp.
vinsonii
, and
B. bovis
Bermond et al.(“
B. weissii
”). Phylogenetically derived trees revealed four statistically supported groups, indicating that sequencing of the
ftsZ
gene is a useful tool for identifying evolutionary relationships among
Bartonella
species. Furthermore, we amplified and sequenced the portion of the
ftsZ
gene encoding the C-terminal region of the protein for 4
B. bacilliformis
isolates, 14
B. clarridgeiae
isolates, 14
B. quintana
isolates, and 30
B. henselae
isolates that were obtained from different geographic regions, hosts, and clinical specimens.
B. clarridgeiae
and
B. quintana
sequences were highly conserved, while those of the four
B. bacilliformis
isolates differed from the type strain at 5 positions. Among
B. henselae
strains isolated from cats and patients, only two genotypes were detected: Houston and Marseille. Among 80 clinical samples we detected
Bartonella
spp. in 35 (43.75%) and found the assay to be comparable to that of a combined intergenic-spacer-region- and
pap31
-based PCR assay. Our results show the usefulness of the portion of the
ftsZ
gene encoding the C-terminal region for diagnosis of
Bartonella
infections. More samples should be tested to study its usefulness for epidemiological investigations.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology