4.7 Article

Effects of Decontamination, DNA Extraction, and Amplification Procedures on the Molecular Diagnosis of Mycobacterium ulcerans Disease (Buruli Ulcer)

Journal

JOURNAL OF CLINICAL MICROBIOLOGY
Volume 50, Issue 4, Pages 1195-1198

Publisher

AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1128/JCM.05592-11

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Funding

  1. Directorate General for Development Cooperation (DGDC, Brussels, Belgium) through Buruli Ulcer Control (Benin, West Africa) [3.05]
  2. Stop Buruli Initiative
  3. UBS Optimus Foundation (Zurich, Switzerland)
  4. European Commission [HEALTH-F3-2010-241500-BuruliVac]
  5. Fund for Scientific Research, Flanders (Belgium) (FWO) [G.0301.01]

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We compared two DNA extraction methods (a semiautomated method using a Maxwell kit and a modified Boom method) and three amplification procedures (a single-step PCR, a nested PCR, and a real-time quantitative PCR) on 74 surgical tissue specimens from patients with clinically suspected Buruli ulcer. All of these procedures were compared before and after decontamination. We observed that, among the procedures tested, real-time PCR after the modified Boom extraction method or a single-run PCR assay after the Maxwell 16 extraction method, performed on nondecontaminated suspensions, are the best for the molecular diagnosis of Mycobacterium ulcerans disease.

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