Diagnostics, Typing And Identification

Method comparison for molecular typing of French and Tunisian Mycoplasma genitalium-positive specimens

  • 1Université de Bordeaux, USC Infections Humaines à Mycoplasmes et Chlamydiae, 33076 Bordeaux, France
  • 2INRA, USC Infections Humaines à Mycoplasmes et Chlamydiae, 33076 Bordeaux, France
  • 3Centre Hospitalier Universitaire de Bordeaux, Service de Maladies Infectieuses B, 33076 Bordeaux, France
  • 4Centre Hospitalier Universitaire de Bordeaux, Laboratoire de Bactériologie, 33076 Bordeaux, France
  • Correspondence
    C. Bébéar cecile.bebear{at}u-bordeaux2.fr
  • Journal of Medical Microbiology 2012; 61(Pt 4):500–506 · https://doi.org/10.1099/jmm.0.037721-0

    View at publisher PubMed

    Abstract

    In this study, 76 French and Tunisian urogenital specimens were subjected to molecular typing by using the two main Mycoplasma genitalium molecular typing methods, the mgpB single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) typing method and the combination analysis of a variable-number tandem-repeat (VNTR) marker in MG309 and mgpB SNP. Furthermore, we tried to develop a multiple-locus VNTR analysis (MLVA) method. The genome of M. genitalium G37T was analysed for VNTRs and four VNTRs were used for an MLVA. The method, applied directly on clinical specimens, was based on a genescan analysis of VNTR loci labelled with fluorescent dyes by using multiplex PCR and capillary electrophoresis. This method had a 1.00 diversity index (DI) while the mgpB SNP typing and the combination of MG309 and mgpB SNPs had DIs of 0.853 and 0.989, respectively. However, among the sets of two concurrent specimens, taken at the same time from the urogenital tracts of 12 patients, only nine had matching MLVA profiles, while the two other methods gave identical profiles for all specimens amplified, except for one set. Moreover, eight new sequence types were described with the mgpB SNP typing method. The three molecular typing methods revealed a genetic heterogeneity, suggesting that M. genitalium was endemic in France and Tunisia and that the infections were not due to the clonal dissemination of one strain. Comparison of the typing results obtained with the three methods showed that the MLVA assay seemed too discriminatory to be used in future studies of sexual networks of M. genitalium infection. According to the discriminatory power and the feasibility of each mgpB-based method, we recommend that the mgpB analysis be used for general epidemiological studies and that the combination of MG309-STR and mgpB SNP methods should be used for sexual-network studies of M. genitalium infection.

    • The GenBank/EMBL/DDBJ accession numbers for the mgpB gene partial sequences of the M. genitalium sequence types 81–88 are HM565865–HM565872, respectively.

    • A supplementary table is available with the online version of this paper.

    Abbreviations:
    DI
    diversity index
    LP
    lipoprotein
    MLVA
    multiple-locus variable-number tandem-repeat analysis
    SNP
    single nucleotide polymorphisms
    ST
    sequence type
    STI
    sexually transmitted infection
    STR
    short tandem repeat
    UPGMA
    unweighted pair-group method with arithmetic mean
    VNTR
    variable-number tandem-repeat