Genome-based species-specific primers for rapid identification of six species of Lactobacillus acidophilus group using multiplex PCR.

2020 
Many Lactobacillus species are frequently isolated from dairy products, animal guts, and the vaginas of healthy women. However, sequencing-based identification of isolated Lactobacillus strain is time/cost-consuming and lobor-intensive. In this study, we developed a multiplex PCR method to distinguish six closely related species in the Lactobacillus acidophilus group (L. gasseri, L. acidophilus, L. helveticus, L. jensenii, L. crispatus, and L. gallinarum), which is based on species-specific primer sets. Altogether, 86 genomes of 9 Lactobacillus species from the National Center of Biotechnology Information (NCBI) database were compared to detect species-specific genes and design six species-specific primer sets. The PCR conditions of the individual primer sets were optimized via gradient PCR methods. A final multiplex PCR condition was also optimized for a mixture of all six primer sets mixed. When identifying a single strain, the optimized multiplex PCR method can specifically detect one of the six species, but no band was amplified at least from the other Lactobacillus and Enterococcus species. These results indicated that species-specific primer sets designed from the genome comparison could identify one strain within the six Lactobacillus species by a single PCR reaction. Using the method described here, we will be able to save time, cost, and labor during species identification and screening of commercially important probiotic lactobacilli.
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