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BMC Microbiology | 2006

Genotyping of Bacillus anthracis strains based on automated capillary 25-loci Multiple Locus Variable-Number Tandem Repeats Analysis

Florigio Lista; Giovanni Faggioni; Samina Valjevac; Andrea Ciammaruconi; Josée Vaissaire; Claudine Le Doujet; Olivier Gorgé; Riccardo De Santis; Alessandra Carattoli; Alessandra Ciervo; Antonio Fasanella; Francesco Orsini; Raffaele D'Amelio; Christine Pourcel; Antonio Cassone; Gilles Vergnaud

BackgroundThe genome of Bacillus anthracis, the etiological agent of anthrax, is highly monomorphic which makes differentiation between strains difficult. A Multiple Locus Variable-number tandem repeats (VNTR) Analysis (MLVA) assay based on 20 markers was previously described. It has considerable discrimination power, reproducibility, and low cost, especially since the markers proposed can be typed by agarose-gel electrophoresis. However in an emergency situation, faster genotyping and access to representative databases is necessary.ResultsGenotyping of B. anthracis reference strains and isolates from France and Italy was done using a 25 loci MLVA assay combining 21 previously described loci and 4 new ones. DNA was amplified in 4 multiplex PCR reactions and the length of the resulting 25 amplicons was estimated by automated capillary electrophoresis. The results were reproducible and the data were consistent with other gel based methods once differences in mobility patterns were taken into account. Some alleles previously unresolved by agarose gel electrophoresis could be resolved by capillary electrophoresis, thus further increasing the assay resolution. One particular locus, Bams30, is the result of a recombination between a 27 bp tandem repeat and a 9 bp tandem repeat. The analysis of the array illustrates the evolution process of tandem repeats.ConclusionIn a crisis situation of suspected bioterrorism, standardization, speed and accuracy, together with the availability of reference typing data are important issues, as illustrated by the 2001 anthrax letters event. In this report we describe an upgrade of the previously published MLVA method for genotyping of B. anthracis and apply the method to the typing of French and Italian B. anthracis strain collections. The increased number of markers studied compared to reports using only 8 loci greatly improves the discrimination power of the technique. An Italian strain belonging to the B branch was described, and two new branches, D and E, are proposed. Owing to the upgrading achieved here, precise genotyping can now be produced either by automated capillary electrophoresis, or by the more accessible but slower and for some markers slightly less accurate agarose gel methodology.


BMC Microbiology | 2011

Reliable identification at the species level of Brucella isolates with MALDI-TOF-MS

Florigio Lista; Frans A. G. Reubsaet; Riccardo De Santis; René Parchen; Ad L de Jong; Jasper Kieboom; Anton L. van der Laaken; Ingrid Ai Voskamp-Visser; Silvia Fillo; Hugo-Jan Jansen; Jan van der Plas; Armand Paauw

BackgroundThe genus Brucella contains highly infectious species that are classified as biological threat agents. The timely detection and identification of the microorganism involved is essential for an effective response not only to biological warfare attacks but also to natural outbreaks. Matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometry (MALDI-TOF-MS) is a rapid method for the analysis of biological samples. The advantages of this method, compared to conventional techniques, are rapidity, cost-effectiveness, accuracy and suitability for the high-throughput identification of bacteria. Discrepancies between taxonomy and genetic relatedness on the species and biovar level complicate the development of detection and identification assays.ResultsIn this study, the accurate identification of Brucella species using MALDI-TOF-MS was achieved by constructing a Brucella reference library based on multilocus variable-number tandem repeat analysis (MLVA) data. By comparing MS-spectra from Brucella species against a custom-made MALDI-TOF-MS reference library, MALDI-TOF-MS could be used as a rapid identification method for Brucella species. In this way, 99.3% of the 152 isolates tested were identified at the species level, and B. suis biovar 1 and 2 were identified at the level of their biovar. This result demonstrates that for Brucella, even minimal genomic differences between these serovars translate to specific proteomic differences.ConclusionsMALDI-TOF-MS can be developed into a fast and reliable identification method for genetically highly related species when potential taxonomic and genetic inconsistencies are taken into consideration during the generation of the reference library.


Radiation Research | 2013

Comparison of Established and Emerging Biodosimetry Assays

Kai Rothkamm; Christina Beinke; Horst Romm; Christophe Badie; Y. Balagurunathan; Stephen Barnard; N. Bernard; H. Boulay-Greene; M. Brengues; A. De Amicis; S. De Sanctis; R. Greither; F. Herodin; A. Jones; Sylwia Kabacik; T. Knie; Ulrike Kulka; Florigio Lista; P. Martigne; A. Missel; Jayne Moquet; Ursula Oestreicher; A. Peinnequin; T. Poyot; U. Roessler; Harry Scherthan; B. Terbrueggen; Hubert Thierens; M. Valente; Anne Vral

Rapid biodosimetry tools are required to assist with triage in the case of a large-scale radiation incident. Here, we aimed to determine the dose-assessment accuracy of the well-established dicentric chromosome assay (DCA) and cytokinesis-block micronucleus assay (CBMN) in comparison to the emerging γ-H2AX foci and gene expression assays for triage mode biodosimetry and radiation injury assessment. Coded blood samples exposed to 10 X-ray doses (240 kVp, 1 Gy/min) of up to 6.4 Gy were sent to participants for dose estimation. Report times were documented for each laboratory and assay. The mean absolute difference (MAD) of estimated doses relative to the true doses was calculated. We also merged doses into binary dose categories of clinical relevance and examined accuracy, sensitivity and specificity of the assays. Dose estimates were reported by the first laboratories within 0.3–0.4 days of receipt of samples for the γ-H2AX and gene expression assays compared to 2.4 and 4 days for the DCA and CBMN assays, respectively. Irrespective of the assay we found a 2.5–4-fold variation of interlaboratory accuracy per assay and lowest MAD values for the DCA assay (0.16 Gy) followed by CBMN (0.34 Gy), gene expression (0.34 Gy) and γ-H2AX (0.45 Gy) foci assay. Binary categories of dose estimates could be discriminated with equal efficiency for all assays, but at doses ≥1.5 Gy a 10% decrease in efficiency was observed for the foci assay, which was still comparable to the CBMN assay. In conclusion, the DCA has been confirmed as the gold standard biodosimetry method, but in situations where speed and throughput are more important than ultimate accuracy, the emerging rapid molecular assays have the potential to become useful triage tools.


BMC Microbiology | 2008

Fieldable genotyping of Bacillus anthracis and Yersinia pestis based on 25-loci Multi Locus VNTR Analysis

Andrea Ciammaruconi; Saverio Grassi; Riccardo De Santis; Giovanni Faggioni; Valentina Pittiglio; Raffaele D'Amelio; Alessandra Carattoli; Antonio Cassone; Gilles Vergnaud; Florigio Lista

BackgroundAnthrax and plague are diseases caused by Bacillus anthracis and Yersinia pestis respectively. These bacteria are etiological agents for worldwide zoonotic diseases and are considered among the most feared potential bioterror agents. Strain differentiation is difficult for these microorganisms because of their high intraspecies genome homogeneity. Moreover, fast strain identification and comparison with known genotypes may be crucial for naturally occurring outbreaks versus bioterrorist events discrimination.ResultsThirty-nine B. anthracis and ten Y. pestis strains, representative of the species genetic diversity, were genotyped by Agilent 2100 Bioanalyzer using previously described Multiple Locus VNTR Analysis assays (MLVA). Results were compared to previous data obtained by standard genotyping system (capillary electrophoresis on automatic sequencer) and, when necessary, direct amplicon sequencing. A reference comparison table containing actual fragment sizes, sequencer sizes and Agilent sizes was produced.ConclusionIn this report an automated DNA electrophoresis apparatus which provides a cheaper alternative compared to capillary electrophoresis approaches was applied for genotyping of B. anthracis and Y. pesti s. This equipment, uses pre-cast gels and provides easy transportation, low maintenance and overall general logistic requirements and costs, is easy to set up and provides rapid analysis. This platform is a candidate for on-site MLVA genotyping of biothreat agents as well as other bacterial pathogens. It is an alternative to the more expensive and demanding capillary electrophoresis methods, and to the less expensive but more time-consuming classical gel electrophoresis approach.


Journal of Cellular Physiology | 2012

Caveolin‐1 overexpression is associated with simultaneous abnormal expression of the E‐cadherin/α–β catenins complex and multiple erbb receptors and with lymph nodes metastasis in head and neck squamous cell carcinomas

Laura Masuelli; Alfredo Budillon; Laura Marzocchella; Marie Agnes Mrozek; Domenico Vitolo; Elena Di Gennaro; Simona Losito; Patrizio Sale; F. Longo; Franco Ionna; Florigio Lista; Raffaella Muraro; Andrea Modesti; Roberto Bei

The presence of lymph node metastases is one of the most important prognostic indicators in head and neck squamous cell carcinomas (HNSCCs). An alteration of the E‐cadherin–catenins complex and EGFR is essential for the invasiveness of cancer cells. Caveolin‐1, the major structural protein of the caveolae, represents a scaffolding molecule for several signaling proteins including EGFR. Although caveolin‐1 has been shown to play a role in inducing the invasive phenotype of cancer cells, its role appears to be cell‐type specific and for some tumors it has not been defined yet. In this study we used 57 HNSCC specimens to investigate whether the abnormal expression of caveolin‐1 was associated with the derangement of the E‐cadherin–catenins complex and with the overexpression of ErbB receptors. We demonstrate that in HNSCCs caveolin‐1 overexpression is associated with the simultaneous abnormal expression of at least one member of the E‐cadherin/α–β catenins complex and multiple ErbB receptors as well as with lymph node metastases. We also demonstrate that chronic stimulation of a human hypopharyngeal carcinoma cell line (FaDu) with EGF induced the internalization of β‐catenin and caveolin‐1 and their co‐localization with EGFR. Moreover, EGF treatment induced an increased physical interaction between EGFR/β‐catenin/caveolin‐1 and between E‐cadherin/β‐catenin/caveolin‐1. These molecular events were associated with an increased directional motility of FaDu cells in vitro. These findings may provide new insight into the biology of HNSCC progression and help to identify subgroups of primary HNSCCs with a more aggressive behavior. J. Cell. Physiol. 227: 3344–3353, 2012.


Radiation Research | 2013

Laboratory Intercomparison of the Dicentric Chromosome Analysis Assay

Christina Beinke; Stephen Barnard; H. Boulay-Greene; A. De Amicis; S. De Sanctis; F. Herodin; A. Jones; Ulrike Kulka; Florigio Lista; D. Lloyd; P. Martigne; Jayne Moquet; Ursula Oestreicher; Horst Romm; Kai Rothkamm; M. Valente; Viktor Meineke; Herbert Braselmann; Michael Abend

The study design and obtained results represent an intercomparison of various laboratories performing dose assessment using the dicentric chromosome analysis (DCA) as a diagnostic triage tool for individual radiation dose assessment. Homogenously X-irradiated (240 kVp, 1 Gy/min) blood samples for establishing calibration data (0.25–5 Gy) as well as blind samples (0.1–6.4 Gy) were sent to the participants. DCA was performed according to established protocols. The time taken to report dose estimates was documented for each laboratory. Additional information concerning laboratory organization/characteristics as well as assay performance was collected. The mean absolute difference (MAD) was calculated and radiation doses were merged into four triage categories reflecting clinical aspects to calculate accuracy, sensitivity and specificity. The earliest report time was 2.4 days after sample arrival. DCA dose estimates were reported with high and comparable accuracy, with MAD values ranging between 0.16–0.5 Gy for both manual and automated scoring. No significant differences were found for dose estimates based either on 20, 30, 40 or 50 cells, suggesting that the scored number of cells can be reduced from 50 to 20 without loss of precision of triage dose estimates, at least for homogenous exposure scenarios. Triage categories of clinical significance could be discriminated efficiently using both scoring procedures.


Emerging Infectious Diseases | 2003

Probable Dengue Virus Infection Among Italian Troops, East Timor, 1999–2000

Mario Stefano Peragallo; Loredana Nicoletti; Florigio Lista; Raffaele D’Amelio

To investigate the attack rate and risk factors for probable dengue fever, a cross-sectional study was conducted of an Italian military unit after its deployment to East Timor. Probable dengue was contracted by 16 (6.6%) of 241 army troops and caused half of all medical evacuations (12/24); no cases were detected among navy and air force personnel.


Emerging Infectious Diseases | 2014

Co-circulation of Dengue and Chikungunya Viruses, Al Hudaydah, Yemen, 2012

Giovanni Rezza; Gamal El-Sawaf; Giovanni Faggioni; Fenicia Vescio; Ranya Al Ameri; Riccardo De Santis; Ghada F. Helaly; Alice Pomponi; Dalia Metwally; Massimo C. Fantini; Hussein Qadi; Massimo Ciccozzi; Florigio Lista

We investigated 400 cases of dengue-like illness in persons hospitalized during an outbreak in Al Hudaydah, Yemen, in 2012. Overall, 116 dengue and 49 chikungunya cases were diagnosed. Dengue virus type 2 was the predominant serotype. The co-circulation of these viruses indicates that mosquitoborne infections represent a public health threat in Yemen.


Journal of Clinical Microbiology | 2011

Clostridium botulinum Group I Strain Genotyping by 15-Locus Multilocus Variable-Number Tandem-Repeat Analysis

Silvia Fillo; Francesco Giordani; Fabrizio Anniballi; Olivier Gorgé; Vincent Ramisse; Gilles Vergnaud; Julia M. Riehm; Holger C. Scholz; Wolf D. Splettstoesser; Jasper Kieboom; Jaran-Strand Olsen; Lucia Fenicia; Florigio Lista

ABSTRACT Clostridium botulinum is a taxonomic designation that encompasses a broad variety of spore-forming, Gram-positive bacteria producing the botulinum neurotoxin (BoNT). C. botulinum is the etiologic agent of botulism, a rare but severe neuroparalytic disease. Fine-resolution genetic characterization of C. botulinum isolates of any BoNT type is relevant for both epidemiological studies and forensic microbiology. A 10-locus multiple-locus variable-number tandem-repeat analysis (MLVA) was previously applied to isolates of C. botulinum type A. The present study includes five additional loci designed to better address proteolytic B and F serotypes. We investigated 79 C. botulinum group I strains isolated from human and food samples in several European countries, including types A (28), B (36), AB (4), and F (11) strains, and 5 nontoxic Clostridium sporogenes. Additional data were deduced from in silico analysis of 10 available fully sequenced genomes. This 15-locus MLVA (MLVA-15) scheme identified 86 distinct genotypes that clustered consistently with the results of amplified fragment length polymorphism (AFLP) and MLVA genotyping in previous reports. An MLVA-7 scheme, a subset of the MLVA-15, performed on a lab-on-a-chip device using a nonfluorescent subset of primers, is also proposed as a first-line assay. The phylogenetic grouping obtained with the MLVA-7 does not differ significantly from that generated by the MLVA-15. To our knowledge, this report is the first to analyze genetic variability among all of the C. botulinum group I serotypes by MLVA. Our data provide new insights into the genetic variability of group I C. botulinum isolates worldwide and demonstrate that this group is genetically highly diverse.


BMC Veterinary Research | 2010

SNR analysis: molecular investigation of an anthrax epidemic

Giuliano Garofolo; Andrea Ciammaruconi; Antonio Fasanella; Silvia Scasciamacchia; Rosanna Adone; Valentina Pittiglio; Florigio Lista

BackgroundIn Italy, anthrax is endemic but occurs sporadically. During the summer of 2004, in the Pollino National Park, Basilicata, Southern Italy, an anthrax epidemic consisting of 41 outbreaks occurred; it claimed the lives of 124 animals belonging to different mammal species. This study is a retrospective molecular epidemiological investigation carried out on 53 isolates collected during the epidemic. A 25-loci Multiple Locus VNTR Analysis (MLVA) MLVA was initially performed to define genetic relationships, followed by an investigation of genetic diversity between epidemic strains through Single Nucleotide Repeat (SNR) analysis.Results53 Bacillus anthracis strains were isolated. The 25-loci MLVA analysis identified all of them as belonging to a single genotype, while the SNR analysis was able to detect the existence of five subgenotypes (SGTs), allowing a detailed epidemic investigation. SGT-1 was the most frequent (46/53); SGTs 2 (4/53), 3 (1/53) 4 (1/53) and 5 (1/53) were detected in the remaining seven isolates.ConclusionsThe analysis revealed the prevalent spread, during this epidemic, of a single anthrax clone. SGT-1 - widely distributed across the epidemic area and present throughout the period in question - may, thus, be the ancestral form. SGTs 2, 3 and 4 differed from SGT-1 at only one locus, suggesting that they could have evolved directly from the latter during the course of this epidemic. SGT-5 differed from the other SGTs at 2-3 loci. This isolate, thus, appears to be more distantly related to SGT-1 and may not be a direct descendant of the lineage responsible for the majority of cases in this epidemic. These data confirm the importance of molecular typing and subtyping methods for in-depth epidemiological analyses of anthrax epidemics.

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Giovanni Faggioni

Laboratory of Molecular Biology

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Riccardo De Santis

Laboratory of Molecular Biology

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Laura Masuelli

Sapienza University of Rome

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Roberto Bei

University of Rome Tor Vergata

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Andrea Modesti

University of Rome Tor Vergata

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Monica Benvenuto

University of Rome Tor Vergata

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Elisa Regalbuto

Sapienza University of Rome

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Fabrizio Anniballi

Istituto Superiore di Sanità

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Massimo C. Fantini

University of Rome Tor Vergata

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