Molecular Studies on the Aerolysin Gene of Aeromonas Species and Discovery of a Species-Specific Probe for Aeromonas trota Species Nova

Abstract
A large group of aeromonads and other enteric microorganisms were assayed for the presence of the aerolysin gene with use of DNA-DNA hybridization. Two DNA fragments corresponding to the regulatory region (aerC) and the structural gene (aerA) were used as probes for the detection of the aerolysin gene in these strains. Sequences corresponding to the aerolysin structural gene were widespread among Aeromonas isolates. In contrast, the aerC probe was much more selective, and sequences corresponding to the aerC region were detected in only a small subset of strains. Concurrent studies using numerical taxonomy and DNA hybridization with the aerC probe on a larger set of strains led to the identification of a distinct cluster of 14 presumed atypical Aeromonas sobria strains. These strains have recently been grouped into a new species designated Aeromonas trota. Hence, the DNA fragment aerC used in the study is a species-specific gene probe for A. trota. The ability of the aerC probe to detect strains belonging to a single species suggests that there is selection pressure to maintain the clonality of this species. These results have important implications with respect to the evolution of “pathogenic profiles” among these medically important bacteria.