Abstract

In this study, we demonstrate the clinical applicability of molecular assays for the differential identification of M. tuberculosis isolates by Double Repetitive Element-PCR (DRE-PCR), Duplex PCR (DPCR), Random Amplified Polymorphic DNA-PCR (RAPD-PCR) and IS6110 flanking PCR and for the detection of specific codon mutations in antibiotic-resistant genes, rpoB and katG in 55 MDR-TB and 25 drug-susceptible clinical isolates by Multiplex PCR assays. The MAS-PCR assay was identified as the most prevalent rpoB gene mutations at codon 531 (83.6%), followed by codon 526 (12.7%), and no mutation was found in codon 516. Among the 55 MDR-TB isolates, 49 (89%) isolates had S315T, 5 (9%) had S315N mutations. DRE-PCR and RAPD-PCR generated similar banding of cluster III strains and suggested that MDR-TB strain genotype C may be responsible for the transmission of TB infection among the study population. PCR based differential identification of mtp40 and rpoB DPCR procedures identified two NTM strains among the isolates studied. Genotypic method DRE-PCR was found highly reproducible, followed by RAPD-PCR and mtp40, and rpoB DPCR methods effectively-identified NTM infection in this region. The presence of S315T mutation in katG gene and S531L, H526Y mutations in rpoB gene in MDR-TB isolates proved resistant phenotype. The simplicity of the MAS-PCR assay permits its implementation for the detection of resistance to INH and RIF in clinical laboratories in regions where this mutation is predominant among MDR-TB strains.

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