MIRU-VNTR typing adds discriminatory value to groups of Mycobacterium bovis and Mycobacterium caprae strains defined by spoligotyping
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Elsevier
Abstract
The value of Mycobacterial Interspersed Repetitive Units-Variable Number Tandem
Repeats (MIRU-VNTR) as a genotyping technique for Mycobacterium bovis and
Mycobacterium caprae, has been confirmed in different countries and epidemiological
scenarios. However, a standardized panel of loci has not yet been adopted for these species,
since allelic diversity of each locus differs among countries. To determine the most
discriminatory loci, a panel of 181 M. bovis and M. caprae strains representing 12
spoligotypes was created. The panel included strains from the three predominant
spoligotypes previously isolated in Portugal; strains from spoligotyping group SB0140,
prevalent in the British Isles but also detected in Portugal; strains from spoligotypes
common to cattle and wildlife species and strains from the M. caprae spoligotyping group
SB0157. MIRU-VNTR analysis of these strains, targeting 8 selected loci, produced 87
different profiles (h = 0.99), being VNTR3232, QUB11a, ETR-B and ETR-A the most
discriminatory loci (h = 0.96). A single M. bovis spoligotyping group could be differentiated
– up to 44 MIRU-VNTR profiles. These results emphasize the high genotype diversity of
Portuguese isolates compared with other countries. MIRU-VNTR typing was superior to
spoligotyping for identifying multi-genotype infected herds and the combination of the
two genotyping methods by a hierarchical approach confirmed the genetic relatedness of
M. bovis isolates between cattle and wildlife.