The emergence of rifampin-resistant strains of pathogenic mycobacteria has threatened the usefulness of this drug in treating mycobacterial diseases. Critical to the treatment of individuals infected with resistant strains is the rapid identification of these strains directly from clinical specimens. It Rifampin is an important component of effective multidrug therapies for tuberculosis and leprosy; however, widespread use has led to the emergence of rifampin-resistant (Rif) strains, threatening its usefulness in treating mycobacterial diseases (4-6, 8, 26, 27). Rapid information about drug susceptibility patterns is critical to the treatment of individuals with mycobacterial disease for which rifampin is indicated. Since conventional drug susceptibility testing can require 2 to 4 weeks after growth detection (Mycobacterium tuberculosis) or up to a year (Mycobacterium leprae) in mouse footpads, improvements are needed to yield accurate analysis in a shorter time. DNA diagnostic assays have the potential to provide rapid analysis of rifampin resistance in mycobacteria because of their high degree of sensitivity and specificity and the fact that they do not rely on in vitro growth for results. Shortening the time between diagnosis and the onset of effective therapy should improve patients' survival (tuberculosis) or decrease physical deformities and ocular manifestations resulting in disabilities and blindness (leprosy).Developing such assays requires knowledge of the molecular basis of Rif' in pathogenic mycobacteria. Mutations resulting in the Rif' phenotype in prokaryotes have been mapped to the gene encoding the 1-subunit of the DNA-dependent RNA polymerase (rpoB gene) (10, 11). Recently, the entire rpoB genes of M. leprae (7) resistance have been identified in both species (8,12,28,29). To further characterize mutations associated with the Rif phenotype in M. tuberculosis, M. leprae, and other pathogenic mycobacteria, we developed a rapid PCR-based, DNA sequencing protocol targeted to a 305-bp region of rpoB. By direct DNA sequencing of PCR products, the nucleic acid sequence within this region was determined in 4 rifampinsusceptible (Rifs) and 4 Rif' strains of M. leprae and in 12 Rif' and 110 Rif' strains of M. tuberculosis. In addition, mutations were identified in this region of Rif' strains of Mycobacterium africanum and Mycobacterium avium, the latter causing frequent opportunistic infections in immunocompromised hosts. On the basis of these results we have established conditions for a PCR-heteroduplex formation assay (PCR-HDF) for the rapid detection of the Rif' phenotype in pathogenic mycobacteria. MATERUILS AND METHODSMycobacterial strains. Rifampin-susceptible and -resistant strains of M. leprae were isolated initially from homogenates of skin biopsy samples from lepromatous leprosy patients not responding to antileprosy therapy, which included rifampin, and were subsequently defined as resistant to rifampin by the standard mouse footpad drug susceptibility assay (23). These strains were amplifie...
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