Quantification of intestinal bacterial populations by real-time PCR with a universal primer set and minor groove binder probes: a global approach to the enteric flora

SJ Ott, M Musfeldt, U Ullmann, J Hampe… - Journal of clinical …, 2004 - Am Soc Microbiol
SJ Ott, M Musfeldt, U Ullmann, J Hampe, S Schreiber
Journal of clinical microbiology, 2004Am Soc Microbiol
The composition of the human intestinal flora is important for the health status of the host.
The global composition and the presence of specific pathogens are relevant to the effects of
the flora. Therefore, accurate quantification of all major bacterial populations of the enteric
flora is needed. A TaqMan real-time PCR-based method for the quantification of 20
dominant bacterial species and groups of the intestinal flora has been established on the
basis of 16S ribosomal DNA taxonomy. A PCR with conserved primers was used for all …
Abstract
The composition of the human intestinal flora is important for the health status of the host. The global composition and the presence of specific pathogens are relevant to the effects of the flora. Therefore, accurate quantification of all major bacterial populations of the enteric flora is needed. A TaqMan real-time PCR-based method for the quantification of 20 dominant bacterial species and groups of the intestinal flora has been established on the basis of 16S ribosomal DNA taxonomy. A PCR with conserved primers was used for all reactions. In each real-time PCR, a universal probe for quantification of total bacteria and a specific probe for the species in question were included. PCR with conserved primers and the universal probe for total bacteria allowed relative and absolute quantification. Minor groove binder probes increased the sensitivity of the assays 10- to 100-fold. The method was evaluated by cross-reaction experiments and quantification of bacteria in complex clinical samples from healthy patients. A sensitivity of 101 to 103 bacterial cells per sample was achieved. No significant cross-reaction was observed. The real-time PCR assays presented may facilitate understanding of the intestinal bacterial flora through a normalized global estimation of the major contributing species.
American Society for Microbiology