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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, June 1999, p. 2723-2729, Vol. 65, No. 6
Molecular Diagnostics Unit,
Received 16 September 1998/Accepted 3 March 1999
Pseudomonas aeruginosa is a pathogen in both humans and
animals. This bacterium, most often associated with respiratory
infections in cystic fibrosis patients, was found to be the causative
agent in bovine mastitis outbreaks among 11 Irish dairy herds.
Epidemiological findings suggested that the infection was spread to all
herds by teat wipes that had been contaminated with this organism. Two molecular-typing strategies were used in an attempt to determine the
genomic relationship(s), if any, of the P. aeruginosa
strains isolated from the various herds and to verify whether the same strain was responsible for each outbreak. Thirty-six isolates from the
mastitis outbreaks were tested and compared to fourteen clinical
isolates from Cork University Hospital. With one exception, all
outbreak-linked strains produced identical patterns when ribotyped with
ClaI and PvuII enzymes. Eight of the clinical
isolates gave the same ClaI ribotype pattern as the
mastitis-causing strains. However, PvuII proved more
discriminatory, with only the outbreak isolates producing identical
patterns. Similar results were obtained with RW3A-primed DNA
amplification fingerprinting, with all outbreak isolates except one
displaying the same fingerprint array. The clinical strains produced
several fingerprint patterns, all of which were different from those of
the mastitis-causing isolates. Fine-resolution DNA fingerprinting with
a fluorescence-labelled RW3A primer also identified a number of
low-molecular-weight polymorphisms that would have remained undetected
by conventional methods. These data support the view that the same
P. aeruginosa strain was responsible for the
mastitis outbreaks in all 11 herds.
0099-2240/99/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1999, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Molecular Analysis of Pseudomonas
aeruginosa: Epidemiological Investigation of Mastitis Outbreaks in
Irish Dairy Herds
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Molecular
Diagnostics Unit, Cork Institute of Technology, Bishopstown,
Cork, Ireland. Phone: (353-21) 326 235. Fax: (353-21) 545 343. E-mail: sfanning{at}cit.ie.
Dedicated to the memory of our colleague Martin O'Dwyer.
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