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Pneumocystis jirovecii multilocus genotyping profiles in patients from Portugal and Spain

Autores

Esteves, F. , Montes-Cano, M. A. , DE LA HORRA PADILLA, CARMEN, Costa, M. C. , Calderon, E. J. , Antunes, F. , Matos, O.

Publicación externa

Si

Medio

Clin Microbiol Infect

Alcance

Article

Naturaleza

Científica

Cuartil JCR

Cuartil SJR

Impacto JCR

3.554

Impacto SJR

1.664

Fecha de publicacion

01/04/2008

ISI

000253757800010

Abstract

Pneumonia caused by the opportunistic organism Pneumocystis jirovecii is a clinically important infection affecting AIDS and other immunocompromised patients. The present study aimed to compare and characterise the frequency pattern of DNA sequences from the P. jirovecii mitochondrial large-subunit rRNA (mtLSU rRNA) gene, the dihydropteroate synthase (DHPS) gene and the internal transcribed spacer (ITS) regions of the nuclear rRNA operon in specimens from Lisbon (Portugal) and Seville (Spain). Total DNA was extracted and used for specific molecular sequence analysis of the three loci. In both populations, mtLSU rRNA gene analysis revealed an overall prevalence of genotype 1. In the Portuguese population, genotype 2 was the second most common, followed by genotype 3. Inversely, in the Spanish population, genotype 3 was the second most common, followed by genotype 2. The DHPS wild-type sequence was the genotype observed most frequently in both populations, and the DHPS genotype frequency pattern was identical to distribution patterns revealed in other European studies. ITS types showed a significant diversity in both populations because of the high sequence variability in these genomic regions. The most prevalent ITS type in the Portuguese population was Eg, followed by Cg. In contrast to other European studies, Bi was the most common ITS type in the Spanish samples, followed by Eg. A statistically significant association between mtLSU rRNA genotype 1 and ITS type Eg was revealed.

Palabras clave

dihydropteroate synthase; genotyping; ITS types; mtLSU rRNA analysis; multilocus genotyping; Pneumocystis jirovecii