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CAMPYLOBACTER I

CAMPYLOBACTER I. Hin-chung Wong Department of Microbiology Soochow University. Content. INTRODUCTION. TAXONOMY AND GENERAL CHARACTERISTICS Classification and Biotyping Microaerophilism Morphology Growth Temperature and Heat Resistance

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CAMPYLOBACTER I

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  1. CAMPYLOBACTERI Hin-chung Wong Department of Microbiology Soochow University

  2. Content • INTRODUCTION. • TAXONOMY AND GENERAL CHARACTERISTICS • Classification and Biotyping • Microaerophilism • Morphology • Growth Temperature and Heat Resistance • Effects of Iron and Other Minerals • Plasmid Profile and Antibiotic Resistance • SEROTYPING, PHAGE TYPING, INTERACTION WITH LECTINS AND MOLECULAR TYPING • Serotyping • Phage typing • Typing with lectins • Molecular typing • Restriction fragments • PCR methods • Ribotying • Pulsed-field gel electrophoresis • Multilocus sequencing • OCCURRENCE IN ENVIRONMENT, ANIMALS AND FOODS • Environment • In Animals • In Foods

  3. Content • CONTROL OF CAMPYLOBACTER IN FOODS • ISOLATION AND ENUMERATION • Enrichment Procedures • Selective Media • Identification • Most Probable Number Method and Direct Plate count • Filtration Method • Immunofluorescence Microscopy • Bioluminescence Assay • Enzyme-linked Immunosorbent Assay • Confirmation by latex agglutination • Detection of toxin • Detection of toxin genes • PATHOGENICITY AND VIRULENCE FACTORS • Campylobacter Enteritis • Animal Model • Chemotaxis • Adhesion and Invasion • Enterotoxins • Cytotoxins • MOLECULAR STUDIES OF ANTIBIOTIC RESISTANCE • CONCLUSIONS • REFERENCES

  4. INTRODUCTION • Campylobacters (formerly Vibrio fetus) were first associated with diseases of cattle and sheep at the beginning of 20th century. • Campylobacter could be isolated from the normal flora of barnyard animals and fowl and caused periodically diarrheal diseases. • Therefore, much of the early investigation of Campylobacter was done by the veterinary community

  5. INTRODUCTION • Campylobacter also caused human abortion and tissue and blood infections including septic arthritis, bacterial endocarditis, phlebitis (血栓靜脈炎), meningoencephalitis, prolonged febrile illness (發燒), stillbirth, etc. • Most of the early illnesses attributed to Campylobacter was caused by C. fetus

  6. INTRODUCTION • Campylobacter enteritis, caused by C. jejuni and C. coli, is a relatively recent disease • first recognized following several water and milk borne epidemics in the mid-1970s • Today, enteritis caused by C. jejuni/coli is as common as that caused by Salmonella and Shigella combined.

  7. INTRODUCTION • Epidemics involving C. jejuni have been reported from both developed and underdeveloped countries and it is also one of the causative agents of traveller's diarrhea • Children in the underdeveloped countries could be asymptomatic carriers and also the leading cause of diarrhea

  8. TAXONOMY AND GENERAL CHARACTERISTICS • The genus Campylobacter is composed of Gram-negative, vibroid shaped bacteria which, when examined microscopically in wet mounts, exhibit a corkscrew-like darting motility • Originally classified in the genus Vibrio and the new genus, Campylobacter, was created by Sebald and Veron in 1963

  9. Classification and Biotyping

  10. Classification and Biotyping • The genus is divided initially into two groups based on the presence or absence of catalase. The catalase-negative species are generally considered to be saphrophytes • All "C. upsaliensis" strains were hippurate negative, and six of seven were susceptible to cephalothin. This new species could be a potential human pathogen associated with gastroenteritis and bacteremia in normal individuals as well as with opportunistic infections in immunocompromised patients

  11. Classification and Biotyping • The catalase-positive species include C. jejuni, C. coli, and C. fetus subspecies fetus and venerealis, C. laridis and C. hyointestinalis. • C. hyointestinalis has been isolated from pigs with proliferative ileitis, but its role in human disease has not been established. • Aerotolerant Campylobacter strains have also been identified from aborted porcine, ovine, and equine fetus, and DNA homology studies suggest them to be a new species.

  12. Classification and Biotyping • C. jejuni and C. coli are the most common, human intestinal pathogens, although other catalase-positive species are occasionally responsible for cases of human gastroenteritis • Generally, the human intestinal pathogens (C. jejuni, C. coli) can be distinguished by their thermophilic growth properties (i.e. growth at 42C). • The non-intestinal pathogens grow at 25C, but not at 42C

  13. Biotyping

  14. Classification and Biotyping • The bacteria were preincubated in polymyxin B (which has been used to release the cell-associated secretory proteins, such as enterotoxins, protease, alkaline phosphatase, DNase, etc.) and suspended into the well in the DNase test agar plate (DNase agar of Difco with 0.01% toluidine blue O). A strong pink zone indicating DNA hydrolysis was seen around the well after 20 to 24 h of aerobic incubation at 37C.

  15. Microaerophilism • These bacteria fail to grow aerobically in air atmospheres (i.e. 21% O2, v/v), but can be cultured successfully under microaerobic conditions in atmospheres containing 6-10% oxygen supplemented with 5% carbon dioxide, either nitrogen or hydrogen may be used to make up the difference in partial pressure

  16. Microaerophilism • The microaerophilic nature of the campylobacters may be related to their sensitivity to toxic reduced forms of oxygen, such as superoxide radicals and hydrogen peroxide. Such toxic substances may be formed by photoreaction and in the presence of air.

  17. Microaerophilism

  18. Microaerophilism • Addition of ferric iron, sodium metabisulphite, sodium pyruvate to brucella-based medium permitted most strains of C. jejuni to grow aerobically (i.e. at 21% oxygen) in a CO2 incubator • The addition of bovine erythrocyte superoxide dismutase (Cu/Zn enzyme) to brucella agar is even more effective in enhancing aerotolerance • Catalase (catalase and superoxide dismutase are present in the cytoplasm of catalase-positive campylobacters) also enhance aerotolerance, but to a lesser extent.

  19. Microaerophilism • The chemicals added to enhance aerotolerance scavenge superoxide radicals (ferric iron binding dihydroxyphenyl compounds, ferric iron bisulphate coordination complexes) • or decompose hydrogen peroxide (e.g. pyruvate) • Addition of active superoxide dismutase, a superoxide anion scavenging enzyme, minimizes production of cocccoid forms in suspensions stored in air

  20. Microaerophilism • Addition of charcoal trap for free radicals generated by photochemical oxidative mechanisms, therefore, it is recommended that media used for the primary isolation of campylobacters be stored in the dark to prevent peroxide build-up in the medium

  21. Microaerophilism • Proteins involved in the oxidative stress of campylobacters have been studied. • Of the three groups of haemoglobins identified in microorganisms (single-domain globins, flavohaemoglobins and truncated globins), the last group is involved in moderating O2 flux within C. jejuni.

  22. Microaerophilism • The function of the truncated haemoglobin (Ctb) encoded by C. jejuni was investigated by constructing a ctb mutant and characterizing its phenotype • Cells mutated in ctb were disadvantaged when grown under conditions of high aeration and defective in survival in air

  23. Microaerophilism

  24. Microaerophilism • Furthermore, the rate at which ctb mutant cells consumed O2 in an O2 electrode (10-200 microM O2) was approximately half the rate displayed by wild-type cells, reflecting a role for Ctb in respiration at physiologically relevant external O2 concentrations

  25. Microaerophilism

  26. Microaerophilism • Pathogenic bacteria experience nitrosative stress from NO generated in the host and from nitrosating species such as S-nitrosoglutathione. • The food-borne pathogen C. jejuni responds by activating gene expression from a small regulon under the control of the NO-sensitive regulator, NssR. • The NssR regulon up-regulated two hemoglobins (Cgb and Ctb) and more than 90 other genes, notably those encoding heat shock proteins and proteins involved in oxidative stress tolerance and iron metabolism/transport

  27. Microaerophilism • The putative global posttranscriptional regulator csrA was mutated in C. jejuni. • In E. coli, CsrA is involved in regulating stationary-phase metabolism, represses glycogen biosynthesis, gluconeogenesis, peptide transport, and biofilm formation. • The csrA mutant was attenuated in surviving oxidative stress.

  28. Microaerophilism

  29. Microaerophilism • In another study, the oxidative stress response after exposure to paraquat, a strong oxidising agent, was analyzed by two-dimensional protein electrophoresis and Maldi-ToF mass spectrometry • Oxidative stress and redox-related proteins were overexpressed: FldA flavodoxin and a pyruvate-flavodoxin oxidoreductase encoded by cj1476c. • No increase in SodB expression was observed. • An additional quantitative RT-PCR analysis showed an increase in katA but not in sodB expression • However, the sodB mutant was very sensitive to paraquat,

  30. Morphology • Several morphology forms of C. jejuni are found in culture. Rod forms, which include spirals, S-shaped and characteristically curved cells predominate in fresh young cultures • whereas non-culturable coccoid forms occur mainly in old cultures • In addition, rods transform to coccoid forms when conditions are unfavorable for growth • Compared with stored media, production of coccoid forms was less on freshly prepared media • Addition of supplements used as detoxifying agents (ferrous sulphate, sodium metabisulphite and sodium pyruvate) minimized production of these forms on media.

  31. Morphology • VBNC

  32. Morphology

  33. Growth Temperature and Heat Resistance • Optimal temperature for the growth of Campylobacter is at 42C. • C. jejuni is not a heat-stable bacterium, with low D value. The D value in chicken medium was higher than in peptone medium

  34. Growth Temperature and Heat Resistance

  35. Effects of Iron and Other Minerals • Cells grown in low-iron medium exhibited slower growth rates and altered cellular morphology • Increased numbers of longer, more filamentous forms were seen in Gram-stain smears

  36. Effects of Iron and Other Minerals

  37. Effects of Iron and Other Minerals • Three proteins, with apparent Mol.Wt. of 82,000, 76,000, and 74,000, were consistently present in the outer membrane of cells grown in low-iron medium

  38. Plasmid Profile and Antibiotic Resistance • Serotyping, phage typing, plasmid profile and antibiotic resistance could be useful epidemiological markers • Usually high percentage of Campylobacter spp. contain plasmid, e.g. 53% of isolates from animals contained plasmid DNA ranged in size from less than 1 to 86 MDa • Resistance to tetracycline and gentamicin were probably plasmid mediated • Most strains were susceptible to kanamycin, clindamycin, chloramphenicol, kanamycin, tobramycin, streptomycin, erythromycin, gentamicin, tetracycline, and compound sulfonamide

  39. Plasmid Profile and Antibiotic Resistance • In another study, tetracycline resistance was detected in six out of nine C. coli isolates (67 %) and 13 out of 74 C. jejuni isolates (18 %). • Both low- and high-level tetracycline resistance was associated with the presence of the tet(O) gene. • In C. jejuni, tet(O) was plasmid-encoded in 54 % of tetracycline-resistant isolates • whereas in C. coli, tet(O) appeared to be located on the chromosome

  40. Plasmid Profile and Antibiotic Resistance

  41. Plasmid Profile and Antibiotic Resistance • Partial sequence analysis of a tet(O) plasmid from a multiple-drug-resistant clinical isolate of C. jejuni revealed 10 genes or pseudogenes encoding different aminoglycoside inactivating enzymes, transposase-like genes, and multiple unknown genes from a variety of pathogenic and commensal bacteria

  42. Plasmid Profile and Antibiotic Resistance • The plasmid in Lactococcus and Lactobacillus species contains two putative antibiotic resistance homologs, an ermB gene encoding erythromycin and clindamycin resistance, and a streptomycin resistance gene, aadE. • Of particular note is the aadE gene which holds 100% identity to an aadE gene found in C. jejuni plasmid but which probably originated from a Gram-positive source

  43. Serotyping • Serological typing of the campylobacters is complex and several schemes have been devised, however, no uniform serotyping scheme has been adopted, and there are over 50 recognized serotypes of C. jejuni • Antigens used for serological typing include heat stable and heat labile antigenic factors, outer membrane proteins and flagellar antigens

  44. Phage typing • A bacteriophage typing system was developed with phages isolated from poultry feces • Selection of 14 phages from the 47 phages available was assisted by determination of the Sneath-Jaccard similarity coefficients and subsequent unweighted pair-group arithmetic averaging cluster analysis • This typing set was reproducible and stable in the isolates from Illinois

  45. Typing with lectins • Bacterial suspension, 50 ul, reacted with 50 ul of lectin solutions (lectins from different plants) in U-bottomed microtiter wells • Different reaction patterns were observed (Table 5). Heating of the cultures to 100C and holding for 30-60 min greatly enhanced their reactivity with lectins

  46. Typing with lectins

  47. Restriction fragments • On the basis of restrictive digest, six types were identified with AfaI, seven types with MboI and five types with HaeIII. • With a combination of these three enzymes, 22 types were found

  48. Restriction fragments

  49. PCR methods • PCR methods are also developed. Based on a 10-mer primer (5'-CCTGTTAGCC-3'), a random amplified polymorphic DNA (RAPD) method for typing C. coli isolated from pigs was developed

  50. PCR methods • Amplified fragment length polymorphism (AFLP) patterns was applied to type C. jejuni isolates from human and chicken

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