Typing of Neisseria gonorrhoeae Opa and NG-MAST gene of 12 pairs of sexual contact gonorrhea patients in China

Hongxiang Chen , Zhihong Wu , Rongyi Chen , Li Xu , Ying Yu , Jun Shuai , Juan Li , Ming Tan , Yating Tu , Jiawen Li

Current Medical Science ›› 2008, Vol. 28 ›› Issue (22) : 472 -475.

PDF
Current Medical Science ›› 2008, Vol. 28 ›› Issue (22) : 472 -475. DOI: 10.1007/s11596-008-0422-0
Article

Typing of Neisseria gonorrhoeae Opa and NG-MAST gene of 12 pairs of sexual contact gonorrhea patients in China

Author information +
History +
PDF

Abstract

To identify the genomic species of Neisseria gonorrhoeae, evaluate the difference between two molecular epidemiological methods and examine the relationship between sex partners and genotypes of bacteria, 24 strains of Neisseria gonorrhoeae isolated from the outpatients with gonorrhea were identified by using the Opa genotyping and NG-MAST genotyping and the relationship between genotypes and phenotypes was studied. Twenty-four strains of Neisseria gonorrhoeae fell into 10 ST genotypes by NG-MAST genotyping, whereas these strains were classified into 12 OT Opa genotypes by Opa genotyping. A new epidemic strain of ST genotype (217–86% homologisation 178) in China was identified. It is concluded that genotypes of each pair of strains from a pair of patient/ sex partner besides 45/46 are the same, indicating that contagious infection take place between patient and the sex partner. Opa genotyping was more effective than NG-MAST genotyping in identifying the genomic species of Neisseria gonorrhoeae. ST genotype could be further classified into different Opa-types.

Keywords

Neisseria gonorrhoeae / genotype / NG-MAST

Cite this article

Download citation ▾
Hongxiang Chen, Zhihong Wu, Rongyi Chen, Li Xu, Ying Yu, Jun Shuai, Juan Li, Ming Tan, Yating Tu, Jiawen Li. Typing of Neisseria gonorrhoeae Opa and NG-MAST gene of 12 pairs of sexual contact gonorrhea patients in China. Current Medical Science, 2008, 28(22): 472-475 DOI:10.1007/s11596-008-0422-0

登录浏览全文

4963

注册一个新账户 忘记密码

References

[1]

ChenH. X., TuY. T., LinN. X., et al.. Construction of prokaryotic expression plasmid of mtrC protein of Neisseria gonorrhoeae and its expression in E. coli. J Huazhong Univ Science and Technol [Med Sci], 2005, 25(5): 582-584

[2]

KlineK. A., SechmanE. V., SkaarE. P., et al.. Recombination, repair and replication in the pathogenic Neisseriae: the 3 R’s of molecular genetics of two human-specific bacterial pathogens. Mol Microbiol, 2003, 50(1): 3-13

[3]

HobbsM. M., AlcornT. M., DavisR. H., et al.. Molecular typing of Neisseria gonorrhoeae causing repeated infections: evolution of porin during passage within a community. J Infect Dis, 1999, 179(2): 371-381

[4]

SandstromE., BygdemanS.. Serological classification of Neisseria gonorrhoeae. Clinical and epidemiological applications. Antonie van Leeuwenhoek, 1987, 53(6): 375-380

[5]

MilesK., ChurchwardC. P., McAuliffeL., et al.. Identification and differentiation of European and African/Australian strains of Mycoplasma mycoides subspecies mycoides small-colony type using polymerase chain reaction analysis. J Vet Diagn Invest, 2006, 18(2): 168-171

[6]

BingenE., BarcM. C., BrahimiN., et al.. Randomly amplified polymorphic DNA analysis provides rapid differentiation of methicillin-resistant coagulase-negative staphylococcus bacteremia isolates in pediatric hospital. J Clin Microbiol, 1995, 33(6): 1657-1659

[7]

YoungH., McElhinneyJ., PalmerH. M., et al.. The Scottish gonococcal surveillance contributors: Extended surveillance of gonorrhoea in Scotland 2003. Int J STD AIDS, 2006, 17(10): 687-692

[8]

MartinI. M., IsonC. A., AanensenD. M., et al.. Rapid sequence-based identification of gonococcal transmission clusters in a large metropolitan area. J Infect Dis, 2004, 189(8): 1497-1505

[9]

KostiukovaN. N., BekhaloV. A.. Molecular biological basis of the gonococcal pathogenicity and specific features of immune response. Zh Mikrobiol Epidemiol Immunobiol, 2006, 1(1): 105-112

[10]

O’RourkeM., IsonC. A., RentonA. M., et al.. Opa-typing: a high-resolution tool for studying the epidemiology of gonorrhoea. Mol Microbiol, 1995, 17(5): 865-875

[11]

MartinI. M., GhaniA., BellG., et al.. Persistence of two genotypes of Neisseria gonorrhoeae during transmission. J Clin Microbiol, 2003, 41(12): 5609-5614

[12]

AydinD., KoksalanK., KomecS., et al.. Auxo-, sero-, and opa-typing of Neisseria gonorrhoeae strains isolated in Istanbul, Turkey. Sex Transm Dis, 2004, 31(10): 628-630

[13]

KoladerM. E., DukersN. H., van der BijA. K., et al.. Molecular epidemiology of Neisseria gonorrhoeae in Amsterdam, The Netherlands, shows distinct heterosexual and homosexual networks. J Clin Microbiol, 2006, 44(8): 2689-2697

[14]

SprattB. G., et al.. Multilocus sequence typing: molecular typing of bacterial pathogens in an era of rapid DNA sequencing and the internet. Curr Opin Microbiol, 1999, 2(3): 312-316

[15]

ViscidiR. P., DemmaJ. C., GuJ., et al.. Comparison of sequencing of the por gene and typing of the opa gene for discrimination of Neisseria gonorrhoeae strains from sexual contacts. J Clin Microbiol, 2000, 38(12): 4430-4438

[16]

UnemoM., PalmerH. M., BlackmoreT., et al.. Global transmission of prolyliminopeptidase-negative Neisseria gonorrhoeae strains: implications for changes in diagnostic strategies. Sex Transm Infect, 2007, 3(1): 7-51

[17]

De JonghM., DangorY., IsonC. A., et al.. Neisseria gonorrhoeae multi-antigen sequence typing (NG-MAST) of ciprofloxacin resistant isolates of Pretoria, South Africa. J Clin Pathol, 2008, 61(5): 686-687

[18]

UnemoM., PalmerH. M., BlackmoreT., et al.. Global transmission of prolyliminopeptidase-negative Neisseria gonorrhoeae strains: implications for changes in diagnostic strategies. Sex Transm Infect, 2007, 83(1): 47-51

[19]

MartinI. M., IsonC. A., AanensenD. M., et al.. Changing epidemiologic profile of quinolone-resistant Neisseria gonorrhoeae in London. J Infect Dis, 2005, 192(7): 1191-1195

[20]

MorrisA. K., PalmerH. M., YoungH., et al.. Opa-typing can identify epidemiologically distinct subgroups within Neisseria gonorrhoeae multi-antigen sequence type (NG-MAST) clusters. Epidemiol Infect, 2008, 136(3): 417-420

AI Summary AI Mindmap
PDF

88

Accesses

0

Citation

Detail

Sections
Recommended

AI思维导图

/