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Recent
Articles
El-Hajj HH, Marras SA, Tyagi S, Kramer FR, Alland D
Detection of rifampin resistance in Mycobacterium tuberculosis
in a single tube with molecular beacons.
J Clin Microbiol 2001 Nov;39(11):4131-7
PMID: 11682541
Current clinical assays for determining antibiotic susceptibility
in Mycobacterium tuberculosis require many weeks to complete due
to the slow growth of the bacilli. Here we demonstrate an extremely
sensitive single-tube PCR assay that takes less than 3 h and reliably
identifies rifampin-resistant M. tuberculosis in DNA extracted directly
from sputum. Ninety-five percent of mutations associated with rifampin
resistance occur in an 81-bp core region of the bacterial RNA polymerase
gene, rpoB. All mutations that occur within this region result in
rifampin resistance. The assay uses novel nucleic acid hybridization
probes called molecular beacons. Five different probes are used
in the same reaction, each perfectly complementary to a different
target sequence within the rpoB gene of rifampin-susceptible bacilli
and each labeled with a differently colored fluorophore. Together,
their target sequences encompass the entire core region. The generation
of all five fluorescent colors during PCR amplification indicates
that rifampin-susceptible M. tuberculosis is present. The presence
of any mutation in the core region prevents the binding of one of
the molecular beacons, resulting in the absence of one of the five
fluorescent colors. When 148 M. tuberculosis clinical isolates of
known susceptibility to rifampin were tested, mutations associated
with rifampin resistance were detected in 63 of the 65 rifampin-resistant
isolates, and no mutations were found in any of the 83 rifampin-susceptible
isolates. When DNA extracted directly from the sputum of 11 patients
infected with rifampin-resistant tuberculosis was tested, mutations
were detected in all of the samples. The use of this rapid assay
should enable early detection and treatment of drug-resistant tuberculosis
in clinical settings.

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