TY - JOUR
T1 - Identification of culturable vaginal Lactobacillus species among reproductive age women in Mysore, India
AU - Madhivanan, Purnima
AU - Alleyn, Harry N.
AU - Raphael, Eva
AU - Krupp, Karl
AU - Ravi, Kavitha
AU - Nebhrajani, Roshan
AU - Arun, Anjali
AU - Reingold, Arthur L.
AU - Riley, Lee W.
AU - Klausner, Jeffrey D.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2015 The Authors.
PY - 2015/7/6
Y1 - 2015/7/6
N2 - A healthy vaginal environment is predominated by certain Lactobacillus species, which lead to the prevention of infections of the reproductive tract. This study examined the characteristics of cultivable Lactobacillus species in both healthy women and women with bacterial vaginosis (BV). Between November 2011 and September 2013, 139 women attending a women’s clinic in Mysore, India, were evaluated for BV in a cross-sectional study. BV was diagnosed using Amsel’s criteria: homogeneous vaginal discharge, vaginal pH .4.5, production of amines, and presence of ‘‘clue’’ cells. Those with three or more of the characteristics were considered to have BV. Vaginal swabs were then cultured in Rogosa agar and de Man-Rogosa-Sharpe broth. Gram-positive lactobacilli generating 600–800 bp amplicons by16 sRNA were further characterized by sequencing. Cultivable vaginal samples were obtained from 132 women (94.9 %). According to the Amsel criteria, 83 women (62.1 %) were healthy, and 49 (37.1 %) had BV. Eleven different Lactobacillus species were isolated from 47 women. The common lactobacilli species found in this sample included L. crispatus (39.6 %), L. gasseri (45.8 %), and L. jensenii (14.6 %). Lactobacilli were isolated from 39 healthy women and eight with BV. L. gasseri was cultured from 18.8 % of healthy women and 6.1 % with BV. The presence of L. reuteri was significantly associated with normal vaginal microbiota (P-value50.026). These results further our understanding of vaginal lactobacilli colonization and richness in this particular population. Our findings showed that lactobacilli species present in the vaginas of healthy women in India do not differ from those reported from other countries.
AB - A healthy vaginal environment is predominated by certain Lactobacillus species, which lead to the prevention of infections of the reproductive tract. This study examined the characteristics of cultivable Lactobacillus species in both healthy women and women with bacterial vaginosis (BV). Between November 2011 and September 2013, 139 women attending a women’s clinic in Mysore, India, were evaluated for BV in a cross-sectional study. BV was diagnosed using Amsel’s criteria: homogeneous vaginal discharge, vaginal pH .4.5, production of amines, and presence of ‘‘clue’’ cells. Those with three or more of the characteristics were considered to have BV. Vaginal swabs were then cultured in Rogosa agar and de Man-Rogosa-Sharpe broth. Gram-positive lactobacilli generating 600–800 bp amplicons by16 sRNA were further characterized by sequencing. Cultivable vaginal samples were obtained from 132 women (94.9 %). According to the Amsel criteria, 83 women (62.1 %) were healthy, and 49 (37.1 %) had BV. Eleven different Lactobacillus species were isolated from 47 women. The common lactobacilli species found in this sample included L. crispatus (39.6 %), L. gasseri (45.8 %), and L. jensenii (14.6 %). Lactobacilli were isolated from 39 healthy women and eight with BV. L. gasseri was cultured from 18.8 % of healthy women and 6.1 % with BV. The presence of L. reuteri was significantly associated with normal vaginal microbiota (P-value50.026). These results further our understanding of vaginal lactobacilli colonization and richness in this particular population. Our findings showed that lactobacilli species present in the vaginas of healthy women in India do not differ from those reported from other countries.
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U2 - 10.1099/jmm.0.000070
DO - 10.1099/jmm.0.000070
M3 - Article
C2 - 25873579
AN - SCOPUS:84935146782
SN - 0022-2615
VL - 64
SP - 636
EP - 641
JO - Journal of Medical Microbiology
JF - Journal of Medical Microbiology
IS - 6
ER -