APA
de Cárdenas, Inés & Fernández Garayzábal, José F. & de la Cruz, María Luisa & Domínguez, Lucas & Ugarte Ruiz, María & Gómez Barrero, Susana (2015 ) .Efficacy of a typing scheme for Campylobacter based on the combination of true and questionable CRISPR.
ISO 690
de Cárdenas, Inés & Fernández Garayzábal, José F. & de la Cruz, María Luisa & Domínguez, Lucas & Ugarte Ruiz, María & Gómez Barrero, Susana. 2015 .Efficacy of a typing scheme for Campylobacter based on the combination of true and questionable CRISPR.
https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12080/39608
Resumen:
This study evaluates an improved scheme for Campylobacter genotyping based on the combination of true
and questionable CRISPR (clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats) elements. A total of 180
Campylobacter strains (Campylobacter jejuni n = 93 and Campylobacter coli n = 87), isolated from neck skin
and caecal content of broilers, poultry meat and sewage water were analysed. Another 97 C. jejuni DNA samples
from cases of human campylobacteriosis were assessed. Sixty-three genotypes were found in C. jejuni considering
only true CRISPR, and 16 additional genotypes were identified when questionable CRISPR were also taken
into account. Likewise in C. coli the number of genotypes increased from eight for only true CRISPR to 14 after in cluding questionable CRISPR elements. The number of typeable C. jejuni and C. coli isolates was 115 (60.5%) and
17 (19.5%) respectively considering only true CRISPR. These percentages increased to 92.7% (n = 176) and 39.1%
(n = 34) respectively when both true and questionable CRISPR were considered. 60.9% of the C. coli isolates were
non-typeable by CRISPR due to the lack of any PCR amplifiable CRISPR loci, which raises questions about CRISPR
analysis as an appropriate method for C. coli typing. However the assessment of true and questionable CRISPR has
proved to be fairly useful for typing C. jejuni due to its high discriminatory power (Simpson's index = 0.960) and
typeability (92.7%) values. The results of the present work show that our genotyping method based on the com bination of true and questionable CRISPR elements may be used as a suitable complementary tool to existing
C. jejuni genotyping methods.