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Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, January 2003, p. 442-443, Vol. 47, No. 1
0066-4804/03/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/AAC.47.1.442-443.2003
Copyright © 2003, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
| LETTER TO THE EDITOR |
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In the UL97 gene, there exist three known mutations in codon 460 conferring GCV resistance: the ATG-to-GTG (M460V) mutation, the ATG-to-ATA (M460I) mutation, and the ATG-to-ATT (M460I) mutation. Any point mutation in codon 460 will lead to the loss of an NlaIII restriction site (1). Therefore, the NlaIII digest is used to detect both M460V and M460I (1). Unfortunately, the digest is unspecific with respect to the mutation. The ATG-to-ATT (M460I) mutation generates a new MseI site. Thus, this mutation can be differentiated from the ATG-to-GTG (M460V) mutation or the ATG-to-ATA (M460V) mutation, as shown in Fig. 1, and the specific digest can be detected sensitively using a polyacrylamide gel with silver staining.
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FIG. 1. (I) Discrimination of the ATG-to-GTG/ATA versus the ATG-to-ATT mutation in UL97 codon 460. (Ia) NlaIII digest: sample 1 (tracheal secretion of a kidney transplant recipient) shows a mixture of wild-type and mutant strains (lane 1), and sample 2 (PP6, GCV-resistant laboratory strain) shows the presence of a mutant strain only (lane 2). (Ib) MseI digest with respect to NlaIII: sample 1 shows the presence of a wild-type strain (the presence of a ATG-to-GTG or -ATA mutation can be assumed) (lane 1); sample 2 shows mixture of wild-type and mutant strains (ATG to ATT must exist, and ATG to GTG or ATA can be assumed) (lane 2). Sequencing revealed a GTG and wild-type mixture for sample 1 and an ATT and GTG mixture for sample 2. (II) Pitfall of the 591/592 double mutation: use of an HaeIII digest for A591V screening can be misleading when there also exists a C592G mutation; an HaeIII digest as well as an FseI digest will result in wild-type patterns. Using the 591/592R mismatch primer (a*), a new TaqI site will be generated. (IIa) HaeIII digest: sample 1 (leukocyte, +251 days post PBSCT) shows only the mutant strain (lane 1); sample 2 (cerebrospinal fluid, + 263 days post PBSCT) shows only the wild-type strain (lane 2). (IIb) TaqI digest: exclusion of a 591V/592G double mutation. Lanes AD, AD169 GCV-sensitive laboratory strain; lanes M, 123-bp ladder.
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On day +263 after PBSCT, a HaeIII digest for screening in codon 591 was negative in a cerebrospinal fluid specimen (Fig. 1, panel IIa, sample 2). RFLP analysis of the other UL97 codons also revealed the wild-type strain. The possibility of the existence of an A591V/C592G double mutation could not be excluded (Fig. 1, panel II). For examination of this potential double mutation, a half-nested PCR on the previously published 189-bp fragment was performed using primer 595F (5'CCT CATG CGG CTG TTG GACC) (6) and, instead of primer 595R, the mismatch primer 591/592R (5'GAG CTT GCC GTT CTC CAA CGC GC GGt). Just in case both the A591V mutation and the C592G mutation exist simultaneously, a TaqI site will be generated (Fig. 1, panel II). Using this procedure, the potential double mutation can easily be detected for routine purposes.
Since there is little known about the incidence of GCV resistance in the PBSCT setting (4), the longitudinal use of an expanded and well-optimized UL97 RFLP strategy for GCV resistance screening will contribute to more reliable data on the incidence of GCV resistance.
Present address: Department of Anesthesiology, University Hospital, Hoppe-Seylerstr. 3, D-72076 Tübingen, Germany. |
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Tobias Eckle![]() Gerhard Jahn Klaus Hamprecht* Institute of Medical Virology and Epidemiology of Viral Diseases University Hospital of Tübingen Elfriede-Aulhorn-Str. 6 D-72076 Tübingen, Germany
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| * Phone: 49 7071 2984657Fax: 49 7071 295016E-mail: kshampre{at}med.uni-tuebingen.de. |
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