Novel evidence suggesting Clostridium difficile is present in human gut microbiota more frequently than previously suspected

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Abstract

Prevalence rate of Clostridium difficile in healthy human adults is believed to be very low. Our RT-PCR system using glass powder, which can eliminate PCR inhibitors, detected C. difficile toxin B mRNA in 16 of 30 fecal samples (53.3%) from healthy human adults. In contrast, we failed to detect toxin B in the same fecal samples by PCR using DNA templates extracted with phenol-chloroform. Our results suggest that PCR inhibitors in feces carried through phenol-chloroform extraction procedure might suppress the sensitivity of PCR and that C. difficile is actually present in human gut microbiota more frequently than previously suspected.

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CITATION STYLE

APA

Iizuka, M., Konno, S., Itou, H., Chihara, J., Toyoshima, I., Horie, Y., … Watanabe, S. (2004). Novel evidence suggesting Clostridium difficile is present in human gut microbiota more frequently than previously suspected. Microbiology and Immunology, 48(11), 889–892. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1348-0421.2004.tb03607.x

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