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First Cultivation and Characterization of Mycobacterium ulcerans from the Environment

BACKGROUND: Mycobacterium ulcerans disease, or Buruli ulcer (BU), is an indolent, necrotizing infection of skin, subcutaneous tissue and, occasionally, bones. It is the third most common human mycobacteriosis worldwide, after tuberculosis and leprosy. There is evidence that M. ulcerans is an environ...

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Autores principales: Portaels, Françoise, Meyers, Wayne M., Ablordey, Anthony, Castro, António G., Chemlal, Karim, de Rijk, Pim, Elsen, Pierre, Fissette, Krista, Fraga, Alexandra G., Lee, Richard, Mahrous, Engy, Small, Pamela L. C., Stragier, Pieter, Torrado, Egídio, Van Aerde, Anita, Silva, Manuel T., Pedrosa, Jorge
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2008
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2268003/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18365032
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0000178
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author Portaels, Françoise
Meyers, Wayne M.
Ablordey, Anthony
Castro, António G.
Chemlal, Karim
de Rijk, Pim
Elsen, Pierre
Fissette, Krista
Fraga, Alexandra G.
Lee, Richard
Mahrous, Engy
Small, Pamela L. C.
Stragier, Pieter
Torrado, Egídio
Van Aerde, Anita
Silva, Manuel T.
Pedrosa, Jorge
author_facet Portaels, Françoise
Meyers, Wayne M.
Ablordey, Anthony
Castro, António G.
Chemlal, Karim
de Rijk, Pim
Elsen, Pierre
Fissette, Krista
Fraga, Alexandra G.
Lee, Richard
Mahrous, Engy
Small, Pamela L. C.
Stragier, Pieter
Torrado, Egídio
Van Aerde, Anita
Silva, Manuel T.
Pedrosa, Jorge
author_sort Portaels, Françoise
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Mycobacterium ulcerans disease, or Buruli ulcer (BU), is an indolent, necrotizing infection of skin, subcutaneous tissue and, occasionally, bones. It is the third most common human mycobacteriosis worldwide, after tuberculosis and leprosy. There is evidence that M. ulcerans is an environmental pathogen transmitted to humans from aquatic niches; however, well-characterized pure cultures of M. ulcerans from the environment have never been reported. Here we present details of the isolation and characterization of an M. ulcerans strain (00-1441) obtained from an aquatic Hemiptera (common name Water Strider, Gerris sp.) from Benin. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: One culture from a homogenate of a Gerris sp. in BACTEC became positive for IS2404, an insertion sequence with more than 200 copies in M. ulcerans. A pure culture of M. ulcerans 00-1441 was obtained on Löwenstein-Jensen medium after inoculation of BACTEC culture in mouse footpads followed by two other mouse footpad passages. The phenotypic characteristics of 00-1441 were identical to those of African M. ulcerans, including production of mycolactone A/B. The nucleotide sequence of the 5′ end of 16S rRNA gene of 00-1441 was 100% identical to M. ulcerans and M. marinum, and the sequence of the 3′ end was identical to that of the African type except for a single nucleotide substitution at position 1317. This mutation in M. ulcerans was recently discovered in BU patients living in the same geographic area. Various genotyping methods confirmed that strain 00-1441 has a profile identical to that of the predominant African type. Strain 00-1441 produced severe progressive infection and disease in mouse footpads with involvement of bone. CONCLUSION: Strain 00-1441 represents the first genetically and phenotypically identified strain of M. ulcerans isolated in pure culture from the environment. This isolation supports the concept that the agent of BU is a human pathogen with an environmental niche.
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spelling pubmed-22680032008-03-26 First Cultivation and Characterization of Mycobacterium ulcerans from the Environment Portaels, Françoise Meyers, Wayne M. Ablordey, Anthony Castro, António G. Chemlal, Karim de Rijk, Pim Elsen, Pierre Fissette, Krista Fraga, Alexandra G. Lee, Richard Mahrous, Engy Small, Pamela L. C. Stragier, Pieter Torrado, Egídio Van Aerde, Anita Silva, Manuel T. Pedrosa, Jorge PLoS Negl Trop Dis Research Article BACKGROUND: Mycobacterium ulcerans disease, or Buruli ulcer (BU), is an indolent, necrotizing infection of skin, subcutaneous tissue and, occasionally, bones. It is the third most common human mycobacteriosis worldwide, after tuberculosis and leprosy. There is evidence that M. ulcerans is an environmental pathogen transmitted to humans from aquatic niches; however, well-characterized pure cultures of M. ulcerans from the environment have never been reported. Here we present details of the isolation and characterization of an M. ulcerans strain (00-1441) obtained from an aquatic Hemiptera (common name Water Strider, Gerris sp.) from Benin. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: One culture from a homogenate of a Gerris sp. in BACTEC became positive for IS2404, an insertion sequence with more than 200 copies in M. ulcerans. A pure culture of M. ulcerans 00-1441 was obtained on Löwenstein-Jensen medium after inoculation of BACTEC culture in mouse footpads followed by two other mouse footpad passages. The phenotypic characteristics of 00-1441 were identical to those of African M. ulcerans, including production of mycolactone A/B. The nucleotide sequence of the 5′ end of 16S rRNA gene of 00-1441 was 100% identical to M. ulcerans and M. marinum, and the sequence of the 3′ end was identical to that of the African type except for a single nucleotide substitution at position 1317. This mutation in M. ulcerans was recently discovered in BU patients living in the same geographic area. Various genotyping methods confirmed that strain 00-1441 has a profile identical to that of the predominant African type. Strain 00-1441 produced severe progressive infection and disease in mouse footpads with involvement of bone. CONCLUSION: Strain 00-1441 represents the first genetically and phenotypically identified strain of M. ulcerans isolated in pure culture from the environment. This isolation supports the concept that the agent of BU is a human pathogen with an environmental niche. Public Library of Science 2008-03-26 /pmc/articles/PMC2268003/ /pubmed/18365032 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0000178 Text en This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Public Domain declaration which stipulates that, once placed in the public domain, this work may be freely reproduced, distributed, transmitted, modified, built upon, or otherwise used by anyone for any lawful purpose. https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Public Domain declaration, which stipulates that, once placed in the public domain, this work may be freely reproduced, distributed, transmitted, modified, built upon, or otherwise used by anyone for any lawful purpose.
spellingShingle Research Article
Portaels, Françoise
Meyers, Wayne M.
Ablordey, Anthony
Castro, António G.
Chemlal, Karim
de Rijk, Pim
Elsen, Pierre
Fissette, Krista
Fraga, Alexandra G.
Lee, Richard
Mahrous, Engy
Small, Pamela L. C.
Stragier, Pieter
Torrado, Egídio
Van Aerde, Anita
Silva, Manuel T.
Pedrosa, Jorge
First Cultivation and Characterization of Mycobacterium ulcerans from the Environment
title First Cultivation and Characterization of Mycobacterium ulcerans from the Environment
title_full First Cultivation and Characterization of Mycobacterium ulcerans from the Environment
title_fullStr First Cultivation and Characterization of Mycobacterium ulcerans from the Environment
title_full_unstemmed First Cultivation and Characterization of Mycobacterium ulcerans from the Environment
title_short First Cultivation and Characterization of Mycobacterium ulcerans from the Environment
title_sort first cultivation and characterization of mycobacterium ulcerans from the environment
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2268003/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18365032
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0000178
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