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MYCOPLASMA and Ureaplasma. Dr. R.K.Kalyan Associate Professor Microbiology Dept. KGMU. MYCOPLASMA. Smallest free-living micro organisms, lack cell wall. Size varies from spherical shape(125-250nm to longer branching filaments 500-1000 nm in size. Many can pass through a bacterial filter.
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MYCOPLASMA and Ureaplasma Dr. R.K.Kalyan Associate Professor Microbiology Dept. KGMU
MYCOPLASMA • Smallestfree-living micro organisms, lack cell wall. • Size varies from spherical shape(125-250nm to longer branching filaments 500-1000 nm in size. Many can pass through a bacterial filter. • 1st member of this group – isolated by Nocard & Roux (1898) – caused bovine pleuropneumonia. • Later, many similar isolates were obtained from animals, human beings, plants & environmental sources – called as “pleuropneumonia like organisms”(PPLO).
MYCOPLASMA • Eaton (1944) first isolated the causative agent of the disease in hamsters and cotton rates. • Also known as Eaton agent. • 1956- PPLO replaced by Mycoplasma. • Myco : fungus like branching filaments • Plasma : plasticity • highly pleomorphic – no fixed shape or size - Lack cell wall.
Morphology and Physiology • Small genome size (M. pneumoniae is ~800 Kbp) • Require complex media for growth • Facultative anaerobes • Except M. pneumoniae - strict aerobe • No cell wall means these are resistant to penicillins, cephalosporins and vancomycin, etc. • Grow slowly by binary fission • Doubling time can be as long as 16 hours, extended incubation needed
Morphology and Physiology cont’ • Require complex media for growth, including sterols • Major antigenic determinants are glycolipids and proteins, some cross reaction with human tissues. • Requirements for growth allow one to differentiate between species
Morphology and Physiology cont’ • M. pneumoniae - glucose • M. hominis - arginine • U. urealyticum - urea (buffered media due to growth inhibition by alkaline media) • M. genitalium - difficult to culture
Mycoplasmas of Humans • Parasitic • Established pathogens: M. pneumoniae • Presumed pathogens: M. hominis, U. urealyticum • Non pathogenic: M. orale, M. buccale, M. genitalium, M. fermentans • Saprophytic – present mainly on skin & in mouth.
Pathogenicity • Produce surface infections – adhere to the mucosa of respiratory, gastrointestinal & genitourinary tracts with the help of adhesin. • Two types of diseases: • Atypical Pneumonia • Genital infections
Pathogenicity cont’ • Adherence • P1 pili (M. pneumoniae) • Movement of cilia ceases (ciliostasis) • Clearance mechanism stops resulting in cough • Toxic metabolic products • Peroxide and superoxide • Inhibition of catalase • Immunopathogenesis • Activate macrophages • Stimulate cytokine production • Superantigen (M. pneumoniae) Inflammatory cells migrate to infection and release TNF-a then IL-1 and IL-6
Mycoplasmal pneumonia • Also called Primary Atypical Pneumonia/ Walking pneumonia. • Seen in all ages • Incubation period: 1-3 wks • Transmission: airbornedroplets of nasopharyngeal secretions, close contacts (families, military recruits).
Mycoplasmal pneumonia • Gradual onset with fever, malaise, chills, headache & sore throat. • Severe cough with blood tinged sputum (worsens at night) • Complications: bullous myringitis & otitis, meningitis, encephalitis, hemolytic anemia
Diseases Caused by Mycoplasma • Organism Disease • M. pneumoniae Upper respiratory tract disease, tracheobronchitis, atypical pneumonia, (chronic asthma?) • M. hominisPyelonephritis, pelvic inflammatory disease, • postpartum fever • M. genitalium Nongonococcal urethritis • U. urealyticum Nongonococcal urethritis, (pneumonia and chronic lung disease in premature infants?)
Clinical Syndrome - M. pneumoniae • Incubation - 2-3 weeks • Fever, headache and malaise • Persistent, dry, non-productive cough • Respiratory symptoms • Patchy bronchopneumonia • acute pharyngitis may be present • Organisms persist • Slow resolution • Rarely fatal • Note: Muscle pain and GI symptoms usually not present
Epidemiology - M. pneumoniae • Occurs worldwide • No seasonal variation • Proportionally higher in summer and fall • Epidemics occur every 4-8 year • Spread by aerosol route (Confined populations). • Disease of the young (5-20 years), although all ages are at risk
Laboratory Diagnosis - M. pneumoniae • Microscopy • Difficult to stain • This process can help eliminate other organisms • Culture (definitive diagnosis) • Sputum (usually scant) or throat washings • Special transport medium needed • Must suspect M. pneumoniae • May take 2-3 weeks or longer, 6 hour doubling time with glucose and pH indicator included • Incubation with antisera to look for inhibition.
Laboratory Diagnosis • Specimens – throat swabs, respiratory secretions. • Microscopy – • Highly pleomorphic, varying from small spherical shapes to longer branching filaments. 2. Gram negative, but better stained with Giemsa,Dienes’ stain, crystal-fast violet, orcein or fluorochroming with nucleic acid stain as acredine orange
Laboratory Diagnosis • Isolation of Mycoplasma (Culture) – • Semi solid enriched medium containing 20% horse or human serum, yeast extract & DNA. Penicillium & Thallium acetate are selective agents. (serum – source of cholesterol & other lipids) 2. Incubate aerobically for 7 -12 days with 5–10% CO2at 35-37°C. (temp range 22- 41°C, parasites 35- 37°C, saprophytes – lower temp)
Laboratory Diagnosis 3. Typical “fried egg” appearance of colonies - Central opaque granular area of growth extending into the depth of the medium, surrounded by a flat, translucent peripheral zone. 4. Colonies best seen with a hand lens after staining with Diene’s method. 5. Produce beta hemolytic colonies, can agglutinate guinea pig erythrocytes.
Fried egg colonies Dr Ekta,Microbiology, GMCA
Except for M. pneumoniae colonies which have a • granular appearance, described as being mulberry shaped
Identification of Isolates • Growth Inhibition Test– inhibition of growth around discs impregnated with specific antisera. • Immunofluorescence on colonies transferred to glass slides. • Molecular diagnosis • PCR-based tests are being developed and these are expected to be the diagnostic test of choice in the future. • These should have good sensitivity and be specific
Identification of Isolates • Serological diagnosis • Specific tests – IF, HAI 2. Non specific serological tests – cold agglutination tests (Abs agglutinate human group O red cells at low temperature, 4C). 1:32 titer or above is significant.
Ureaplasma urealyticum • Strains of mycoplasma isolated from the urogenital tract of human beings & animals. • Form very tiny colonies - hence called T strain or T form of mycoplasmas. • Hydrolyzes urea
Genital Infections • Caused by M. hominis & U. urealyticum • Transmitted by sexual contact • Men - Nonspecific urethritis, proctitis, balanoposthitis & Reiter’s syndrome • Women – acute salpingitis, PID, cervicitis, vaginitis • Also associated with infertility, abortion, postpartum fever, chorioamnionitis & low birth weight infants
Mycoplasma & HIV infection • Severe & prolonged infections in HIV infected & other immunodeficient individuals
Mycoplasma as cell culture contaminants • Contaminates continuous cell cultures maintained in laboratories • Interferes with the growth of viruses in these cultures. • Mistaken for viruses. • Eradication from infected cells is difficult.
Treatment and PreventionM. pneumoniae • Treatment • Tetracycline in adults (doxycycline) or erythromycin (children) • Newer fluoroquinolones (in adults) • Resistant to cell wall synthesis inhibitors. • Prevention • Avoid close contact • Isolation is not practical due to length of illness • No vaccine, although attempted
Treatment • Tetracycline, Erythromycin & Clarithromycin – drug of choice • Resistant to antibiotics which interfere with bacterial cell wall synthesis. • Newer macrolides & quinolones being used now.
M. hominis, M. genitalium and U. urealyticum • Treatment • Tetracycline or erythromycin • U. urealyticum is resistant to tetracycline • M. hominis is resistant to erythromycin and sometimes to tetracyclin, Clindamycin for these resistant strains • Prevention • Abstinence or barrier protection • No vaccine
POINTS TO BE REMEMBER • Cold agglutination test • Cell culture contamination • Ureaplasma hydrolysis of urea • Primary atypical/ walking pneumonia • Genital infections • Mycoplasma • No cell wall • Pleomorphism • Fried egg colonies • Diene’s stain
Dienes stain • Azure II • Methylene blue • Maltose • Na2co3 • Benzoic acid • DW
Standard solid media PPLO agar base without crystal violet ph 7.8 +Yeast extract +Horse serum +Sodium deoxy ribonucleate +Thallous acetate solution +K2HPO4, Penicillin solution
Liquid medium • PPLO agar base without crystal violet ph 7.8+Yeast extract +Horse serum +Sodium deoxyribonucleate +Thallous acetate solution+K2HPO4, Penicilin solution + Glucose serum + Phenol red +Methylene blue. Biphasic medium: 1. solid phase- Standard solid medium 2. Liquid phase- Liquid medium.
MCQ Q.1. Which of the following bacteria was named as Eaton agent • Acholeplasma • Mycoplasmahominis • Mycoplasmapneumoniae • Ureaplasmaurealyticum Q.2. Dienes method is used to examine colonies of • Bordetella • Burkholderia • Mycoplasma • Helicobacter
Q.3.Which of the following bacteria is/are associated with nongonococcalurethritis ? • Mycoplasmahominis • Ureaplasmaurealyticum • Chlamydia trachomatis • All of the above Q.4.Which is the causative agent of primary atypical pneumoniae • Influenza virus • Streptococcus Pneumoniae • Haemophilusinfluenzae • Mycoplasmapneumoniae
Q.5. Which of the following can hydrolyse urea • Mycoplasma • Acholeplasma • Ureaplasma • Escherichia Q.6. Which of the following bacteria is/are also named T strain ? • Mycoplasmapneumoniae • Mycoplasmahominis • Ureaplasmaurealyticum • Acholeplasma
Q.7.Postpartum fever due to Mycoplasmahominis is treated with • Penicillin G • A second generation Cephalosporins • Vancomycin • Tetracyclines Q.8.A distinguishing feature of human mycoplasma species is that they: • Stain well with Giemsa, but not by Gram stain • Contain no bacterial peptidoglycan • Are not immunogenic because they mimic host cell membrane components • Cannot be cultivated in vitro
Q.9. which of the following tests can be used to identify Mycoplasmapneumoniae ? • Haemadsorption test • Tetrazolium reduction test • Inhibition of growth by specific antisera • All of the above Q.10. Which of the following bacteria shows fried egg colonies on culture media ? • Helicobacter • Mycobacterium tuberculosis • Bordetella • Mycoplasma
ANSWERS OF MCQ Q.1- C Q.2- C Q.3- d Q.4- d Q.5- C Q.6- C Q.7- d Q.8- b Q.9- d Q.10- d
! Thanks for attention !