Abstract

The polymerase chain reaction was used for the detection of Clostridium difficile, the etiologic agent of antibiotic-associated colitis. An upstream primer identical to a coding region (segment I) of the C. difficile 16S rRNA gene and a downstream primer complementary to a highly conserved region of eubacterial 16S rRNA served to amplify a targeted 270-base-pair fragment of genomic DNA. This technique allowed the detection of as few as 10 C. difficile organisms among 10(6) Escherichia coli bacteria. This level of sensitivity represents a 100-fold increase over that of conventional anaerobic culture. C. difficile was detected in DNA extracted directly from the stools of 23 patients with antibiotic-associated colitis and from those of four patients with diarrhea whose stools had been negative for C. difficile when assessed in a cytotoxicity assay. No amplification products were found in the stools of asymptomatic patients. When detected in stools of symptomatic patients, amplification products of C. difficile were confirmed by Southern blotting with a nonradioactive, horseradish peroxidase-catalyzed, chemiluminescent probing system in which biotin-labeled oligonucleotides were used. This system discriminates between C. difficile and similar organisms, such as Clostridium sordellii and Clostridium bifermentans. The combination of the polymerase chain reaction with enzyme-linked probing results in a faster and more sensitive assay for C. difficile than standard culture.

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