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Isolation and Molecular Confirmation of an indole-negative Klebsiella oxytoca isolated from a patient with cystitis.

Klebsiella oxytoca is an opportunistic pathogen that causes nosocomial infections. We describe an unusual clinical strain of indole-negative K. oxytoca, GU175, isolated from the urine of a patient with cystitis. The GU175 strain was identified as K. pneumoniae with a probability of 99.40%, negative for indole production, and resistant to third-generation cephalosporins by using the MicroScan Walkaway 40 SI system with the Negative combo EN1 J panel. Biochemical characterization of this strain using a lysine-indole motility medium was negative for indole production. However, identification tests using the MALDI Biotyper system and 16S rRNA gene sequence analysis revealed that GU175 was K. oxytoca. DNA sequence analysis of the tryptophanase operon comparing the GU175 strain with the revertant GU176 strain that tested positive for indole revealed a point mutation in the Shine-Dalgarno sequence upstream of tnaC in the GU175 strain. This is the first report of indole-negative K. oxytoca- attributed to a mutation in the DNA sequence of the tryptophanase operon- isolated from a patient with a urinary tract infection. Since indole-negative K. oxytoca can be misidentified as K. pneumoniae by biochemical characterization, clinical microbiologists should be aware of such misidentifications.

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