01448nas a2200253 4500000000100000008004100001260001700042653001200059653002300071653001900094653003100113653002100144653001100165653002500176653003000201653001300231100001600244245007700260300001000337490000700347050001700354520080900371022001401180 1993 d c1993 Sep-Oct10aAnimals10aCloning, Molecular10aDNA, Bacterial10aDrug Resistance, Microbial10aGenes, Bacterial10aHumans10aMycobacterium leprae10apolymerase chain reaction10aRifampin1 aColston M J00aThe microbiology of Mycobacterium leprae; progress in the last 30 years. a504-70 v87 aCOLSTON 19933 a

Over the last 30 years, there have been dramatic changes in the way Mycobacterium leprae is studied in the microbiology laboratory. The organism still has not been grown in vitro but, starting with demonstration of growth in the footpads of mice and culminating in the application of molecular biological and genetic techniques, we are now in a position to circumvent some of the difficulties arising from lack of cultivability. Such studies are providing us with new insights into the basic biology of the organism and are likely to provide new tools which will be of value in the clinical laboratory. In this article, I briefly outline the progress which has been made, and the potential applications of molecular techniques in such areas as bacterial identification and drug-resistance testing.

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