APPLICATIONS OF MOLECULAR ECOLOGY IN THE CHARACTERIZATION OF UNCULTURED MICROORGANISMS ASSOCIATED WITH HUMAN-DISEASE

Citation
Mj. Wilson et al., APPLICATIONS OF MOLECULAR ECOLOGY IN THE CHARACTERIZATION OF UNCULTURED MICROORGANISMS ASSOCIATED WITH HUMAN-DISEASE, Reviews in medical micro-biology, 8(2), 1997, pp. 91-101
Citations number
49
Categorie Soggetti
Microbiology
ISSN journal
0954139X
Volume
8
Issue
2
Year of publication
1997
Pages
91 - 101
Database
ISI
SICI code
0954-139X(1997)8:2<91:AOMEIT>2.0.ZU;2-S
Abstract
Medical microbiologists have relied heavily on the use of Koch's appro ach to cultivate, propagate and establish the involvement of organisms in disease. However, clinical observation is proving that some pathol ogical conditions are associated with microbes that have not been dete cted by traditional cultural methods. Two recent advances have enabled the characterization of uncultured microorganisms: the introduction o f the polymerase chain reaction for gene amplification and the establi shment of a phylogenetically correct classification scheme for bacteri a. This review seeks to summarize the advances that have been made in the characterization of uncultured microorganisms, including examples of new bacteria and disease associations which have been established. The review also describes how methods originally employed in microbial ecology have been applied to the analysis of complex bacterial commun ities, such as the oral microflora, and to the microbiology of purulen t polymicrobial infections, without the biases of culture. The scope a nd limitations of these methods in future applications are discussed. We hope to illustrate how molecular biology and microbial ecology are being combined and applied to improve our understanding of human micro bial disease, and how this may ultimately require a revision of Koch's postulates.