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1.
Denaturing high-performance liquid chromatography (DHPLC) is a recently developed technique for rapid screening of nucleotide polymorphisms in PCR products. We used this technique for the identification of type A, B, E, and F botulinum neurotoxin genes. PCR products amplified from a conserved region of the type A, B, E, and F botulinum toxin genes from Clostridium botulinum, neurotoxigenic C. butyricum type E, and C. baratii type F strains were subjected to both DHPLC analysis and sequencing. Unique DHPLC peak profiles were obtained with each different type of botulinum toxin gene fragment, consistent with nucleotide differences observed in the related sequences. We then evaluated the ability of this technique to identify botulinal neurotoxigenic organisms at the genus and species level. A specific short region of the 16S rRNA gene which contains genus-specific and in some cases species-specific heterogeneity was amplified from botulinum neurotoxigenic clostridia and from different food-borne pathogens and subjected to DHPLC analysis. Different peak profiles were obtained for each genus and species, demonstrating that the technique could be a reliable alternative to sequencing for the rapid identification of food-borne pathogens, specifically of botulinal neurotoxigenic clostridia most frequently implicated in human botulism.  相似文献   

2.
为了解神经毒素原性酪酸梭菌在微山湖地区土壤的分布情况,我们采集了该地区的土壤样品进行调查。50份土样培养上清中,有18份(36%)检出了肉毒毒素,经中和试验证实均为E型。从其中的7份阳性样品中分离到产毒菌株,对分离菌株进行毒性测定、生化特性检查及其神经毒素基因的PCR检测,所有菌株均具有E型肉毒神经毒素基因并产生相应毒素,但其生化特性与E型肉毒梭菌不同,而与酪酸梭菌一致。结果说明沿微山湖地区土壤中确实存在神经毒素原性酪酸梭菌,而且阳性率很高。对神经毒素原性酪酸梭菌的分布进行流行病学调查并从土壤中分离到该病原菌,这在国际上尚属首次。  相似文献   

3.
Botulinum neurotoxin (BoNT) is the most poisonous substances known and its eight toxin types (A to H) are distinguished by the inability of polyclonal antibodies that neutralize one toxin type to neutralize any of the other seven toxin types. Infant botulism, an intestinal toxemia orphan disease, is the most common form of human botulism in the United States. It results from swallowed spores of Clostridium botulinum (or rarely, neurotoxigenic Clostridium butyricum or Clostridium baratii) that germinate and temporarily colonize the lumen of the large intestine, where, as vegetative cells, they produce botulinum toxin. Botulinum neurotoxin is encoded by the bont gene that is part of a toxin gene cluster that includes several accessory genes. We sequenced for the first time the complete botulinum neurotoxin gene cluster of nonproteolytic C. baratii type F7. Like the type E and the nonproteolytic type F6 botulinum toxin gene clusters, the C. baratii type F7 had an orfX toxin gene cluster that lacked the regulatory botR gene which is found in proteolytic C. botulinum strains and codes for an alternative σ factor. In the absence of botR, we identified a putative alternative regulatory gene located upstream of the C. baratii type F7 toxin gene cluster. This putative regulatory gene codes for a predicted σ factor that contains DNA-binding-domain homologues to the DNA-binding domains both of BotR and of other members of the TcdR-related group 5 of the σ70 family that are involved in the regulation of toxin gene expression in clostridia. We showed that this TcdR-related protein in association with RNA polymerase core enzyme specifically binds to the C. baratii type F7 botulinum toxin gene cluster promoters. This TcdR-related protein may therefore be involved in regulating the expression of the genes of the botulinum toxin gene cluster in neurotoxigenic C. baratii.  相似文献   

4.
Abstract The phylogenetic interrelationships of saccharolytic C. botulinum types B, E and F together with eleven other saccharolytic clostridia were examined by 16S rRNA gene sequencing. Comparative analysis of the sequence data revealed that the saccharolytic C. botulinum types B, E and F were highly related and represents a single genetic group. Strains of C. barati and C. butyricum that produce botulinal neurotoxin revealed almost 100% 16S rRNA sequence identity with their respective non-toxigenic counterparts and were phylogenetically distinct from saccharolytic C. botulinum (types B, E and F). Proteolytic C. botulinum type F was shown to be phylogenetically remote from the saccharolytic C. botulinum group. The implications of the sequence data for the taxonomy of the C. botulinum complex are discussed.  相似文献   

5.
Type E botulinum toxin (BoNT/E)-producing Clostridium butyricum strains isolated from botulism cases or soil specimens in Italy and China were analyzed by using nucleotide sequencing of the bont/E gene, random amplified polymorphic DNA (RAPD) assay, pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE), and Southern blot hybridization for the bont/E gene. Nucleotide sequences of the bont/E genes of 11 Chinese isolates and of the Italian strain BL 6340 were determined. The nucleotide sequences of the bont/E genes of 11 C. butyricum isolates from China were identical. The deduced amino acid sequence of BoNT/E from the Chinese isolates showed 95.0 and 96.9% identity with those of BoNT/E from C. butyricum BL 6340 and Clostridium botulinum type E, respectively. The BoNT/E-producing C. butyricum strains were divided into the following three clusters based on the results of RAPD assay, PFGE profiles of genomic DNA digested with SmaI or XhoI, and Southern blot hybridization: strains associated with infant botulism in Italy, strains associated with food-borne botulism in China, and isolates from soil specimens of the Weishan lake area in China. A DNA probe for the bont/E gene hybridized with the nondigested chromosomal DNA of all toxigenic strains tested, indicating chromosomal localization of the bont/E gene in C. butyricum. The present results suggest that BoNT/E-producing C. butyricum is clonally distributed over a vast area.  相似文献   

6.
After the isolation of two strains ofClostridium butyricum that produced type E botulinal toxin from the feces of two babies in Rome affected by infant botulism (P. Aureli, L. Fenicia, M. Gianfranceschi, L. McCroskey, and C. Hatheway, J Infect Dis 154:207–211, 1986), extensive research was carried out to detect botulinal toxin-producing clostridia in soil samples from the vicinity of Rome. A total of 520 specimens from cultivated and pasture lands, obtained from 52 collection stations, were examined.Enrichment cultures were tested for botulinal toxin, and the isolated neurotoxigenic micro-organisms were characterized both enzymatically and gas chromatographically.Clostridium botulinum type A and B proteolytic, the former being the most common, were found in 7 (1.3%) out of 520 samples from 5 (9.6%) of the 52 locations in close association with pasture lands. Possible relationships between the presence of botulinal organisms and the properties of the soil in which they were found have also been investigated.  相似文献   

7.
对某卫生防疫站委托本研究室分离病原菌的一份引起肉毒中毒的食品一"黄豆冬瓜酱"进行检测和病原菌的分离,从中再次检出了E型肉毒毒素并分离到一产毒菌种,对该菌种的生物学及生化学特性进行检查,并检测其毒素基因(PCR试验)。结果:该分离菌能产生E型肉毒毒素,PCR检测结果也证明其具有E型肉毒神经毒素基因,但其多项生化特性与E型肉毒梭菌有明显差异,而与酪酸梭菌完全一致。结果说明该分离菌系产生E型肉毒毒素的酪酸梭菌,而非E型肉毒梭菌。由酪酸梭菌引起的食物中毒型肉毒中毒并从中毒食品中分离到该病原菌,这在国际上尚属首次报告。  相似文献   

8.
对首次自E型肉毒中毒食品中分离到的一株神经毒素原性酪酸梭菌(LCL155)所产生的神经毒素,同E型肉毒梭菌(E153)所产生的神经毒素进行了精制及特性比较,发现(1)两菌神经毒素的分子量,Native-PAGE测试均为320kDa;SDS-PAGE测试则均为147kDa,非毒性非血凝素部分均为128kDa;用胰蛋白酶激活神经毒素后发现两菌神经毒素均由分子量为103kDa的H链和48kDa的L链组成。(2)两菌神经毒素柱层析图像基本一致,但在菌体毒素提取效果及精制效果诸方面,分离的酪酸梭菌却都较差。(3)胰蛋白酶激活试验表明:两菌神经毒素达到最大毒力所需激活时间不等。在相同温度下,分离的酪酸梭菌毒素只需5min,而E型肉毒梭菌毒素却需30min,提示两菌神经毒素激活动力学上存在差异。(4)琼脂双扩散试验结果表明两菌神经毒素的抗原性是一致的,没有发现沉淀线呈交叉或部分交叉现象。  相似文献   

9.
Chromosomal DNAs were extracted from toxigenic three Clostridium botulinum type E strains isolated from food-borne botulism. After digestion by EcoRI, the fragments were cloned into Escherichia coli by using bacteriophage lambda gt11 and screened with monoclonal antibody recognizing the light chain component of botulinum type E toxin. The fragments (about 1 kbp size) cloned from each strain were recloned into a plasmid vector pUC118. The E. coli cells transformed with the recombinant plasmids produced 33 kDa protein with or without IPTG (isopropyl-beta-D-thiogalactopyranoside) which reacted with the monoclonal antibody. The nucleotide sequences of the cloned EcoRI fragments from the three type E strains were identical and contain the 5'-terminal region of the type E toxin gene. It was also found that there exist several highly homologous nucleotide sequences among the botulinum types A, C and E, and tetanus toxin genes in both translated and untranslated regions.  相似文献   

10.
Multiple primer sets were combined with the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and examined for use in the amplification of toxin gene fragments from four Clostridium botulinum types (A, B, E, and F). Vegetative cells obtained from overnight cultures were used directly in the PCR analyses without purification of chromosomal DNA. Gene fragments were amplified from the different botulinal toxin genes that code for types A, B, E and F toxins using a single PCR protocol. Toxin gene fragments were amplified from types B and F toxigenic organisms using the PCR and specific primer sets for these types in a single PCR tube. Type A and E toxin genes were also examined using type A and E specific primers in a separate PCR tube. The PCR-amplified products were separated by electrophoresis on agarose gels containing ethidium bromide. The identity of the PCR products were confirmed by DNA hybridization using type specific probes. We conclude that this method is useful for the rapid and direct identification of toxigenic botulinal organisms that code for the toxin types A, B, E, or F.  相似文献   

11.
Aims:  To develop real-time PCR assays for tracking and tracing clostridia responsible for human botulism.
Methods and Results:  Real-time PCR assays based on the detection of the genes ntnh encoding the nontoxin-nonhaemagglutinin (NTNH) proteins or the most homologous regions of the botulinum neurotoxin ( bont ) genes have been developed together with four real-time PCR assays, each being specific of the genes bont/A , bont/B , bont/E , bont/F and enables a toxin type-specific identification. The specificity of the assays was demonstrated using a panel of botulinum toxin producing clostridia (29 strains), nonbotulinum toxin producing clostridia (21 strains) and various other bacterial strains. The toxin type-specific assays had a sensitivity of 100 fg–1000 fg of total DNA in the PCR tube (25–250 genome equivalents) which correspond to 103 to 104 cells ml−1. After a 48 h enrichment in anaerobic conditions, these PCR assays allowed the detection of Clostridium botulinum type A in a naturally contaminated sample of 'foie gras' suspected in a C. botulinum outbreak.
Conclusion:  These PCR tests are specific and reliable for detection of heterogeneous BoNT producing clostridia responsible for human botulism.
Significance and Impact of the Study:  Adoption of these PCR assays is a step forward a reliable and rapid detection of these clostridia in food samples.  相似文献   

12.
Botulism due to type F botulinum neurotoxin (BoNT/F) is rare (<1% of cases), and only a limited number of clostridial strains producing this toxin type have been isolated. As a result, analysis of the diversity of genes encoding BoNT/F has been challenging. In this study, the entire bont/F nucleotide sequences were determined from 33 type F botulinum toxin-producing clostridial strains isolated from environmental sources and botulism outbreak investigations. We examined proteolytic and nonproteolytic Clostridium botulinum type F strains, bivalent strains, including Bf and Af, and Clostridium baratii type F strains. Phylogenetic analysis revealed that the bont/F genes examined formed 7 subtypes (F1 to F7) and that the nucleotide sequence identities of these subtypes differed by up to 25%. The genes from proteolytic (group I) C. botulinum strains formed subtypes F1 through F5, while the genes from nonproteolytic (group II) C. botulinum strains formed subtype F6. Subtype F7 was composed exclusively of bont/F genes from C. baratii strains. The region of the bont/F5 gene encoding the neurotoxin light chain was found to be highly divergent compared to the other subtypes. Although the bont/F5 nucleotide sequences were found to be identical in strains harboring this gene, the gene located directly upstream (ntnh/F) demonstrated sequence variation among representative strains of this subtype. These results demonstrate that extensive nucleotide diversity exists among genes encoding type F neurotoxins from strains with different phylogenetic backgrounds and from various geographical sources.Botulism is a potentially fatal disease caused solely by the action of serologically distinct neurotoxins (BoNT/A, -B, -C, -D, -E, -F, or -G) which prevent acetylcholine release at neuromuscular junctions, resulting in paralysis. Food-borne botulism may result from the ingestion of a preformed toxin that is produced in inadequately preserved food. Under certain conditions, botulinum neurotoxin-producing Clostridium sp. may colonize and produce toxin in wounds (wound botulism) or in the intestine (infant botulism or adult colonization). Globally, human botulism cases are associated with botulinum neurotoxin serotypes A, B, E, and rarely F. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) maintains active surveillance for botulism cases in the United States. Of 1,269 U.S. cases of botulism reported to the CDC between 1981 and 2002, approximately 1% were due to type F toxin (13). An additional 10 cases of type F botulism were reported to the CDC from 2003 to 2007 (http://www.cdc.gov/nationalsurveillance/botulism_surveillance.html).Type F botulism was first described in 1960 following an outbreak occurring in Denmark involving liver paste (30). The organism isolated in this outbreak metabolically resembled proteolytic Clostridium botulinum strains of types A and B. In a subsequent outbreak, type F toxin was found to be produced by a nonproteolytic C. botulinum strain isolated from venison jerky (29). Bivalent toxin-producing strains have been described, including Bf strains isolated from infants in the United States and England (1, 16, 17, 35) and an Af strain isolated from individuals in Argentina with food-borne botulism (11). Bivalent strains may produce higher titers of one toxin type, which are denoted with a capital letter. The only reported organism isolated from infants with botulism due to type F toxin alone (i.e., not associated with additional serotypes as in bivalent strains) is Clostridium baratii (2, 14, 24). In addition, C. baratii type F has been isolated from adults with botulism (28) as well as suspect foods associated with botulism cases (15; CDC, unpublished data).Botulinum neurotoxin genes (bont) are typically found within toxin gene clusters that include other genes encoding components of the toxin complex (ha70, ha17, ha33, ntnh), regulatory proteins (botR), or proteins with unknown functions (p47, orfX1, orfX2, orfX3). Two general toxin gene cluster arrangements have been described, including the orfX cluster (orfX3-orfX2-orfX1-botR-p47-ntnh-bont) and the ha cluster (ha70-ha17-ha33-botR-ntnh-bont) (21, 22). The bont/F genes of type F and type Bf strains examined by Hill et al. (21) were found in an orfX cluster.The amino acid sequence identities of the BoNT serotypes A to G range from approximately 35 to 70% (36). In addition, within nearly all toxin serotypes, various levels of amino acid sequence variation have been observed, resulting in the identification of toxin subtypes (20, 36, 37).Although a limited number of genes encoding type F botulinum neurotoxin have been sequenced, a comparison of sequences available in public databases indicates that significant diversity exists within this serotype. The nucleotide sequence identity of the type F neurotoxin gene from the proteolytic strain Langeland differs from that of the gene in the nonproteolytic strain 202F by 7%. The type F gene from C. baratii strain ATCC 43756 differs from those of Langeland and 202F by 18% and 20%, respectively. Although the bivalent (Bf) strain CDC3281 is phenotypically proteolytic, the toxin gene shows greater similarity to those from nonproteolytic strains (34). In addition to metabolic differences observed between proteolytic and nonproteolytic C. botulinum strains as well as C. baratii, these organisms are phylogenetically distinct based on differences among their 16S rRNA sequences (5, 20).In order to define the degree of genetic diversity among strains encoding botulinum neurotoxin type F, we sequenced the bont/F gene and partially characterized the toxin gene cluster by using a panel of 33 strains with diverse origins. These strains were selected from those available in the CDC culture collection as well as several isolated in Argentina. The only reported Af strains have been isolated in Argentina. Among 68 outbreaks of serotype-confirmed food-borne botulism in Argentina between 1922 and 2007, type F was isolated in two outbreaks, and type Af was isolated in one outbreak. In addition, Lúquez et al. (26) reported isolation of type F and Af strains from Argentine soils.Here, we report that analysis of the bont/F genes from the strains examined in this study revealed a high degree of nucleotide sequence heterogeneity and the identification of seven type F subtypes (F1 to F7). In addition, the nucleotide sequence of one subtype (F5) has not been previously reported and contains evidence of recombination compared to the other subtypes.  相似文献   

13.
For investigation of the genes of proteins associated in vivo with botulinum neurotoxin (BoNT), polymerase chain reaction (PCR) experiments were carried out with oligonucleotide primers designed to regions of the nontoxic-nonhemagglutinin (NTNH) gene ofClostridium botulinum type C. The primers were used to amplify a DNA fragment from genomic DNA ofC. botulinum types A, B, E, F, G and toxigenic strains ofClostridium barati andClostridium butyricum. The amplified product from all of these strains hybridized with an internal oligonucleotide probe, whereas all nontoxigenic clostridia tested gave no PCR product and showed no reaction with the probe. TheNTNH gene was shown to be located upstream of the gene encoding BoNT, thereby revealing a conserved structure for genes encoding the proteins of the M complex of the progenitor botulinum toxin in these organisms. The sequence of theNTNH gene of nonproteolyticC. botulinum type F was determined by PCR amplification and sequencing of overlapping cloned fragments. NTNH/F showed 71% and 61% identity with NTNH ofC. botulinum type E and type C respectively.  相似文献   

14.
Type E botulinum toxin (BoNT/E)-producing Clostridium butyricum strains isolated from botulism cases or soil specimens in Italy and China were analyzed by using nucleotide sequencing of the bont/E gene, random amplified polymorphic DNA (RAPD) assay, pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE), and Southern blot hybridization for the bont/E gene. Nucleotide sequences of the bont/E genes of 11 Chinese isolates and of the Italian strain BL 6340 were determined. The nucleotide sequences of the bont/E genes of 11 C. butyricum isolates from China were identical. The deduced amino acid sequence of BoNT/E from the Chinese isolates showed 95.0 and 96.9% identity with those of BoNT/E from C. butyricum BL 6340 and Clostridium botulinum type E, respectively. The BoNT/E-producing C. butyricum strains were divided into the following three clusters based on the results of RAPD assay, PFGE profiles of genomic DNA digested with SmaI or XhoI, and Southern blot hybridization: strains associated with infant botulism in Italy, strains associated with food-borne botulism in China, and isolates from soil specimens of the Weishan lake area in China. A DNA probe for the bont/E gene hybridized with the nondigested chromosomal DNA of all toxigenic strains tested, indicating chromosomal localization of the bont/E gene in C. butyricum. The present results suggest that BoNT/E-producing C. butyricum is clonally distributed over a vast area.  相似文献   

15.
Salmon, sole, cod, oysters, clams, and crabs from ocean waters along the coast of Oregon and Washington were examined for the presence of Clostridium botulinum type E. The organism was detected by identification of the type E toxin in enrichment cultures of the viscera of individual fish. Of 369 salmon specimens, 48 yielded cultures containing toxin lethal to mice, and almost half of the toxic cultures were shown to contain botulinal toxin, chiefly type E. Eighteen of 113 sole and cod specimens, 4 of 22 Dungeness crab specimens, 5 of 16 oyster specimens, and 27 of 115 clam specimens gave rise to cultures containing botulinal toxin which was usually type E, although types A and B were occasionally encountered.  相似文献   

16.
A sulfhydryl-dependent protease (SHP) was purified from a culture of Clostridium botulinum type F. The enzyme can activate type E progenitor toxin completely but type B progenitor toxin only partially. This may suggest that SHP by itself could completely activate the toxin of proteolytic C. botulinum types A and F in culture. The toxicity of type E progenitor toxin potentiated by the treatment with SHP persisted, whereas that of derivative toxin decreased rapidly by further incubation with SHP. This may indicate that only the progenitor toxin, the complex of the toxic and nontoxic components, activated by SHP withstands the subsequent exposure to the enzyme in cultures of proteolytic C. botulinum.  相似文献   

17.
Toxin from Clostridium botulinum type F was recovered from dialysis cultures and partially purifed by: (i) ammonium sulfate and ethanol precipitation; (ii) O-(diethylaminoethyl)-cellulose chromatography; or (iii) diethylaminoethyl-cellulose chromatography followed by O-(carboxymethyl)-cellulose chromatography. Toxin purities as reflected by specific activity were 1.83 X 10(6), 9.8 X 10(6), and 2.0 X 10(7) mouse 50% lethal doses (LD50)/mg of N, respectively, for toxins purified by the three methods. The toxins were converted to toxoids by incubation at 35 C in the presence of 0.3 to 0.45% formalin for 21 to 35 days. Toxoids were immunogenic in guinea pigs, as demonstrated by serum antitoxin response and the immunized animals' resistance to challenge by type F botulinal toxin. The immune response to type F toxoids was lower when toxoids of serotypes A, B, C, D, and E were combined with the type F toxoid than when the type F toxoid only was administered. The toxoid prepared from the most highly purified toxin (method [iii]) conferred the highest immunity in guinea pigs at a given dose level. A relation between serum antitoxin level and resistance to challenge was observed. At least 50% of the groups of guinea pigs with 0.015 antitoxin units or more per ml survived challenge by 10(5) mouse LD50 of type F botulinal toxin. A dose of 3.75 mug of N of the most highly purified type F toxoid in combination with the other five serotypes of botulinal toxoid invoked an immune response in guinea pigs comparable to that considered adequate for the other toxoids.  相似文献   

18.
A total of 41 Clostridium botulinum serotype E strains from different geographic regions, including Canada, Denmark, Finland, France, Greenland, Japan, and the United States, were compared by multilocus sequence typing (MLST), amplified fragment length polymorphism (AFLP) analysis, variable-number tandem-repeat (VNTR) analysis, and botulinum neurotoxin (bont) E gene sequencing. The strains, representing environmental, food-borne, and infant botulism samples collected from 1932 to 2007, were analyzed to compare serotype E strains from different geographic regions and types of botulism and to determine whether each of the strains contained the transposon-associated recombinase rarA, involved with bont/E insertion. MLST examination using 15 genes clustered the strains into several clades, with most members within a cluster sharing the same BoNT/E subtype (BoNT/E1, E2, E3, or E6). Sequencing of the bont/E gene identified two new variants (E7, E8) that showed regions of recombination with other E subtypes. The AFLP dendrogram clustered the 41 strains similarly to the MLST dendrogram. Strains that could not be differentiated by AFLP, MLST, or bont gene sequencing were further examined using three VNTR regions. Both intact and split rarA genes were amplified by PCR in each of the strains, and their identities were confirmed in 11 strains by amplicon sequencing. The findings suggest that (i) the C. botulinum serotype E strains result from the targeted insertion of the bont/E gene into genetically conserved bacteria and (ii) recombination events (not random mutations) within bont/E result in toxin variants or subtypes within strains.  相似文献   

19.
Since the first isolation of type E botulinum toxin-producing Clostridium butyricum from two infant botulism cases in Italy in 1984, this peculiar microorganism has been implicated in different forms of botulism worldwide. By applying particular pulsed-field gel electrophoresis run conditions, we were able to show for the first time that ten neurotoxigenic C. butyricum type E strains originated from Italy and China have linear megaplasmids in their genomes. At least four different megaplasmid sizes were identified among the ten neurotoxigenic C. butyricum type E strains. Each isolate displayed a single sized megaplasmid that was shown to possess a linear structure by ATP-dependent exonuclease digestion. Some of the neurotoxigenic C. butyricum type E strains possessed additional smaller circular plasmids. In order to investigate the genetic content of the newly identified megaplasmids, selected gene probes were designed and used in Southern hybridization experiments. Our results revealed that the type E botulinum neurotoxin gene was chromosome-located in all neurotoxigenic C. butyricum type E strains. Similar results were obtained with the 16S rRNA, the tetracycline tet(P) and the lincomycin resistance protein lmrB gene probes. A specific mobA gene probe only hybridized to the smaller plasmids of the Italian C. butyricum type E strains. Of note, a ß-lactamase gene probe hybridized to the megaplasmids of eight neurotoxigenic C. butyricum type E strains, of which seven from clinical sources and the remaining one from a food implicated in foodborne botulism, whereas this ß-lactam antibiotic resistance gene was absent form the megaplasmids of the two soil strains examined. The widespread occurrence among C. butyricum type E strains associated to human disease of linear megaplasmids harboring an antibiotic resistance gene strongly suggests that the megaplasmids could have played an important role in the emergence of C. butyricum type E as a human pathogen.  相似文献   

20.
An amplified enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) for the detection of Clostridium botulinum complex neurotoxins was evaluated for its ability to detect these toxins in food. The assay was found to be suitable for detecting type A, B, E, and F botulinum neurotoxins in a variety of food matrices representing liquids, solid, and semisolid food. Specific foods included broccoli, orange juice, bottled water, cola soft drinks, vanilla extract, oregano, potato salad, apple juice, meat products, and dairy foods. The detection sensitivity of the test for these botulinum complex serotypes was found to be 60 pg/ml (1.9 50% lethal dose [LD50]) for botulinum neurotoxin type A (BoNT/A), 176 pg/ml (1.58 LD50) for BoNT/B, 163 pg/ml for BoNT/E (4.5 LD50), and 117 pg/ml for BoNT/F (less than 1 LD50) in casein buffer. The test could also readily detect 2 ng/ml of neurotoxins type A, B, E, and F in a variety of food samples. For specificity studies, the assay was also used to test a large panel of type A C. botulinum, a smaller panel of proteolytic and nonproteolytic type B, E, and F neurotoxin-producing Clostridia, and nontoxigenic organisms using an overnight incubation of toxin production medium. The assay appears to be an effective tool for large-scale screening of the food supply in the event of a botulinum neurotoxin contamination event.  相似文献   

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