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. 2012 Apr;78(8):2613-22.
doi: 10.1128/AEM.07749-11. Epub 2012 Feb 3.

Quantification of human fecal bifidobacterium species by use of quantitative real-time PCR analysis targeting the groEL gene

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Quantification of human fecal bifidobacterium species by use of quantitative real-time PCR analysis targeting the groEL gene

Jana Junick et al. Appl Environ Microbiol. 2012 Apr.

Abstract

Quantitative real-time PCR assays targeting the groEL gene for the specific enumeration of 12 human fecal Bifidobacterium species were developed. The housekeeping gene groEL (HSP60 in eukaryotes) was used as a discriminative marker for the differentiation of Bifidobacterium adolescentis, B. angulatum, B. animalis, B. bifidum, B. breve, B. catenulatum, B. dentium, B. gallicum, B. longum, B. pseudocatenulatum, B. pseudolongum, and B. thermophilum. The bifidobacterial chromosome contains a single copy of the groEL gene, allowing the determination of the cell number by quantification of the groEL copy number. Real-time PCR assays were validated by comparing fecal samples spiked with known numbers of a given Bifidobacterium species. Independent of the Bifidobacterium species tested, the proportion of groEL copies recovered from fecal samples spiked with 5 to 9 log(10) cells/g feces was approximately 50%. The quantification limit was 5 to 6 log(10) groEL copies/g feces. The interassay variability was less than 10%, and variability between different DNA extractions was less than 23%. The method developed was applied to fecal samples from healthy adults and full-term breast-fed infants. Bifidobacterial diversity in both adults and infants was low, with mostly ≤3 Bifidobacterium species and B. longum frequently detected. The predominant species in infant and adult fecal samples were B. breve and B. adolescentis, respectively. It was possible to distinguish B. catenulatum and B. pseudocatenulatum. We conclude that the groEL gene is a suitable molecular marker for the specific and accurate quantification of human fecal Bifidobacterium species by real-time PCR.

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Figures

Fig 1
Fig 1
Comparison of cell numbers determined with qPCR assays and the Thoma-Zeiss counting chamber using human adult feces spiked with Bifidobacterium species cells. (A) Spiking was performed with 6 log10 (▲), 7 log10 (●), and 8 log10 (■) cells of six Bifidobacterium species. (B) Spiking was performed with 5 log10 (n = 3), 6 log10 (n = 6), 7 log10 (n = 6), 8 log10 (n = 6), and 9 log10 (n = 5) cells of B. adolescentis (⊙), B. angulatum (⊡), B. animalis (formula image), B. breve (♢), B. pseudolongum (▽), and B. thermophilum (○). The values are means. Significance was estimated by one-way ANOVA with Bonferroni's posttests. Differences of means were not significant. GroEL copy recovery was 48% ± 6% (A) and 45% ± 6% (B) (means ± SD).

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