[HTML][HTML] Molecular identification of bacteria associated with bacterial vaginosis

DN Fredricks, TL Fiedler… - New England Journal of …, 2005 - Mass Medical Soc
New England Journal of Medicine, 2005Mass Medical Soc
Background Bacterial vaginosis affects millions of women and is associated with several
serious health conditions. The cause of bacterial vaginosis remains poorly understood
despite numerous studies based on cultures. Bacteria in microbial communities can be
identified without cultivation by characterizing their ribosomal DNA (rDNA) sequences.
Methods We identified bacteria in samples of vaginal fluid with a combination of broad-
range polymerase-chain-reaction (PCR) amplification of 16S rDNA with clone analysis …
Background
Bacterial vaginosis affects millions of women and is associated with several serious health conditions. The cause of bacterial vaginosis remains poorly understood despite numerous studies based on cultures. Bacteria in microbial communities can be identified without cultivation by characterizing their ribosomal DNA (rDNA) sequences.
Methods
We identified bacteria in samples of vaginal fluid with a combination of broad-range polymerase-chain-reaction (PCR) amplification of 16S rDNA with clone analysis, bacterium-specific PCR assay of 16S rDNA, and fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) performed directly on vaginal fluid from 27 subjects with bacterial vaginosis and 46 without the condition. Twenty-one subjects were studied with the use of broad-range PCR of 16S rDNA, and 73 subjects were studied with the use of bacterium-specific PCR.
Results
Women without bacterial vaginosis had 1 to 6 vaginal bacterial species (phylotypes) in each sample (mean, 3.3), as detected by broad-range PCR of 16S rDNA, and lactobacillus species were the predominant bacteria noted (83 to 100 percent of clones). Women with bacterial vaginosis had greater bacterial diversity (P<0.001), with 9 to 17 phylotypes (mean, 12.6) detected per sample and newly recognized species present in 32 to 89 percent of clones per sample library (mean, 58 percent). Thirty-five unique bacterial species were detected in the women with bacterial vaginosis, including several species with no close cultivated relatives. Bacterium-specific PCR assays showed that several bacteria that had not been previously described were highly prevalent in subjects with bacterial vaginosis but rare in healthy controls. FISH confirmed that newly recognized bacteria detected by PCR corresponded to specific bacterial morphotypes visible in vaginal fluid.
Conclusions
Women with bacterial vaginosis have complex vaginal infections with many newly recognized species, including three bacteria in the Clostridiales order that were highly specific for bacterial vaginosis.
The New England Journal Of Medicine