Background: The detection of a broad range of bacteria by PCR is applied for the screening of blood and blood products with special attention to platelet concentrates. For practical use it is desirable that detection systems include Gram-positive, Gram-negative and non-Gram-stainable bacteria. It is quite challenging to achieve high sensitivity along with a clear negative control with PCR reagents, because especially Taq polymerase is contaminated with traces of bacterial DNA. Methods: Bacterial DNA decontamination of Taq polymerase was attempted by two different methods using the restriction enzyme Sau 3A1 and microfiltration. Additionally a commercially available Taq polymerase depleted of bacterial DNA was included. A published real-time PCR specific for Gram-negative bacteria was adapted for Gram-positive bacteria, including certain Staphylococcus species and Mycobacteria, and was used to charge the three Taq polymer-ases depleted of bacterial DNA contamination Results: Despite published reports about successful DNA decontamination, all three approaches performed poorly in experiments done in this study. Sensitivity ranged at approximately 50–100 colony forming units (CFU) per PCR reaction for Escherichia coli and Staphylococcus epidermidis, corresponding to 1,250–2,500 CFU/ml sample material. Conclusion: It seems unsatisfying to accept detection limits that high for diagnostic bacterial PCR even if highly multiplexed. Reliable methods for DNA decontamination of Taq polymerase are needed and would present one important step towards bacterial DNA detection with high sensitivity.
Although no significant association of BD was detected with a single pathogen, our findings suggest that detection of HSV DNA or Chlamydiae would rather argue against classic BD. Whether there is a discriminative potential of the tested immune mediators/receptors has to be elucidated in further studies.
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