Previous Article | Next Article ![]()
Journal of Clinical Microbiology, June 1998, p. 1555-1559, Vol. 36, No. 6
Microbiology Service, Clinical Pathology
Department, Warren Grant Magnuson Clinical Center, National
Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland
Received 30 December 1997/Returned for modification 27 January
1998/Accepted 10 March 1998
The sodium chloride tolerance test is often used in the
identification of rapidly growing mycobacteria, particularly for
distinguishing between Mycobacterium abscessus and
Mycobacterium chelonae. This test, however, is frequently
unreliable for the identification of some species. In this study we
examined the following variables: medium manufacturer, inoculum
concentration, and atmosphere and temperature of incubation. Results
show that reliability is improved if the test and control slants are
inoculated with an organism suspension spectrophotometrically equal to
a 1 McFarland standard. Slants should be incubated at 35°C in ambient
air and checked weekly for 4 weeks. Growth on control slants should be
critically evaluated to determine the adequacy of the inoculum;
colonies should number greater than 50. Salt-containing media should be examined carefully to detect pinpoint or tiny colonies, and colonies should number greater than 50 for a positive reaction.
Concurrent use of a citrate slant may be helpful for
distinguishing between M. abscessus and M. chelonae. Molecular methodologies are probably the most reliable
means for the identification of rapidly growing mycobacteria and should
be used, if possible, when unequivocal species identification is of
particular importance.
The sodium chloride (salt) tolerance
test is commonly used in the identification of some members of the
genus Mycobacterium. Many species of rapidly growing
mycobacteria are salt tolerant and grow readily on Lowenstein-Jensen
medium with 5% NaCl (3, 7). However, Mycobacterium
chelonae and Mycobacterium mucogenicum fail to grow on
this medium, and salt tolerance is often used to distinguish these from
other rapid growers and to differentiate Mycobacterium
abscessus from M. chelonae.
Several investigators have commented on the unreliability of this test
for making distinctions among these organisms (6, 10, 11).
This unreliability may be due to the conflicting guidelines for test
performance and to the vague criteria for test interpretation. Various
inoculum concentrations are recommended by manufacturers and
investigators, including a suspension equal to a 1 McFarland standard
(1, 7), a barely turbid or light suspension (1b, 3, 4,
7a), and a very dilute suspension (12). The optimum
incubation temperature and the optimum atmosphere are also unclear;
recommendations include 28°C in ambient air (3, 7, 12),
28°C in CO2 (1), 35°C in ambient air
(1b, 4) and 35°C in 5 to 10% CO2
(7a). Test interpretation is also not clearly defined, with
some investigators noting that growth of greater than 50 colonies is
considered positive (3, 7, 12), while others consider any
amount of growth positive (1, 1b, 4, 7a).
The studies described here attempt to define the optimum conditions for
test performance and to evaluate the usefulness of the test in relation
to other available tests.
The initial study was performed to determine the effects of inoculum
concentration, medium manufacturer, and incubation temperature on the
results of the salt tolerance test for various rapidly growing
mycobacteria. Because some manufacturers or investigators recommend the
incubation of salt-containing medium in a CO2-containing atmosphere (1, 7a) or at 30°C (10), a smaller
secondary study was performed to determine the effects of incubation in these environments.
(A portion of these data was presented at the 1996 General Meeting of
the American Society for Microbiology, New Orleans, La., 19 to 23 May
1996.)
Effects of medium manufacturer, inoculum concentration, and
incubation temperature. (i) Organisms.
A total of 31 isolates of
five different rapidly growing mycobacterial species were examined for
growth on salt-containing medium under a variety of conditions. Patient
isolates included 15 isolates recovered from patients seen at the
Clinical Center of the National Institutes of Health and 8 isolates
referred to the Mycobacteriology Laboratory of the Maryland State
Health Department (kindly provided to us by Nancy Hooper, Maryland
State Health Department). Identifications of 19 of these isolates were
as follows: M. abscessus, 5 isolates; M. chelonae, 3 isolates; Mycobacterium fortuitum, 5 isolates; M. mucogenicum, 4 isolates;
Mycobacterium peregrinum, 2 isolates. The American Type
Culture Collection (ATCC) type strains examined were M. fortuitum ATCC 6841, M. peregrinum ATCC 14467, M. abscessus ATCC 19977, M. chelonae
ATCC 35752. The strains M. mucogenicum ATCC 49649 and
ATCC 49651 and M. peregrinum ATCC 35755 were included
as representatives of those species. An additional five isolates
belonged to a genetic variant of M. abscessus
(1a) and included M. abscessus ATCC 23006 and four patient isolates.
0095-1137/98/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1998, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Variables Affecting Results of Sodium Chloride
Tolerance Test for Identification of Rapidly Growing
Mycobacteria
![]()
ABSTRACT
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Materials & Methods
Results
Discussion
References
![]()
INTRODUCTION
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Materials & Methods
Results
Discussion
References
![]()
MATERIALS AND METHODS
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Materials & Methods
Results
Discussion
References
(ii) Preparation of organism suspensions.
Single colonies of
each organism were inoculated into 5 ml of Tween Albumin Broth (TAB;
Remel) with glass beads and were incubated at 28 ± 1°C in ambient
air. Broth turbidity was checked spectrophotometrically each day after
vigorous vortexing. Working suspensions were prepared when the percent
transmission (T) of the broth culture was
35.8 ± 2.0%T at 530 nm
(spectrophotometrically equivalent to a 1 McFarland standard
suspension) or after 8 days of incubation for organisms which did not
achieve the target percent T. Suspensions with T of <33.8% were
adjusted to 35.8 ± 2.0%T with TAB. Most M. abscessus isolates and two M. abscessus variant
isolates did not achieve the target percent T; however, these organisms
grew in clumps in TAB, and the clumps could not be completely broken
apart even with vigorous vortexing.
(iii) Media inoculation. One-tenth milliliter each of suspension A, B, and C was inoculated onto two sets of media, each set consisting of one Lowenstein-Jensen agar slant (LJ; Remel) used as a growth control and one slant each of LJ with 5% NaCl (LJ Salt) from three different manufacturers (Remel; BBL, Cockeysville, Md.; Difco, Detroit, Mich.). The medium formulations for the three different manufacturers were essentially identical. As purity check plates Middlebrook 7H11 Agar plates (Remel) and Trypticase Soy Agar with 5% Sheep Blood (BBL) were inoculated with the initial organism suspension.
Colony counts were performed on Middlebrook 7H11 Agar (Remel) from suspensions A, B, and C of five organisms (one isolate each of M. chelonae, M. peregrinum, M. mucogenicum, M. fortuitum, and M. abscessus).(iv) Incubation temperature. To determine the optimum incubation temperature, one set of media was incubated at 35 ± 1°C in ambient air and the other set was incubated at 28 ± 1°C in ambient air. The LJ and LJ Salt were checked for growth weekly for 4 weeks.
Effect of Incubation Temperature and Atmosphere. (i) Organisms. A total of nine organisms were tested: two patient isolates of M. abscessus, three patient isolates of M. chelonae, M. chelonae ATCC 35752, and one patient isolate each of M. fortuitum, M. mucogenicum, and M. peregrinum.
(ii) Organism suspensions and medium inoculation. Suspension A was prepared for each isolate as described above, and three slants each of LJ and LJ Salt from manufacturer 3 were inoculated with 0.1 ml of the suspension.
(iii) Incubation temperature and atmosphere. An LJ and an LJ Salt inoculated with each organism were incubated at 35 ± 1°C in ambient air, 35 ± 1°C in 5% CO2, and 30 ± 1°C in ambient air.
(iv) Test interpretation. For both phases of the study, the salt tolerance test was considered to be interpretable if there were more than 50 colonies of any size (pinpoint colonies to confluent growth) on the control LJ. The test was considered negative if there were less than or equal to 50 colonies on the LJ Salt and positive if the LJ Salt showed more than 50 colonies of any size (3). Correct results were those which agreed with the expected results for a particular organism. The salt tolerance test was expected to be positive for M. abscessus, M. abscessus variant, M. fortuitum, and M. peregrinum; the salt tolerance test was expected to be negative for M. chelonae and M. mucogenicum.
| |
RESULTS |
|---|
|
|
|---|
All patient isolates gave the expected Kinyoun stain results and biochemical reactions (3).
One isolate of M. abscessus gave negative salt tolerance test results with all inoculum concentrations tested with media from all manufacturers and at all temperatures except at 30°C in ambient air. At 30°C growth was tiny and difficult to interpret. This isolate was identified by REA as M. abscessus; staining and biochemical results (including carbon utilization tests) were consistent with those for M. abscessus.
The failure of the initial TAB cultures of some isolates (M. abscessus and M. abscessus variant) to achieve the target percent T had no effect on the interpretability of the results for test and control inoculated with suspension A or B. Control slants prepared from these suspensions all showed far greater than 50 colonies, most with confluent or nearly confluent growth. Nine tests were considered uninterpretable because control slants showed less than 50 colonies. These had all been inoculated with suspension C, and all were M. abscessus or the M. abscessus variant.
Differences in salt tolerance test results obtained with LJ Salt from different manufacturers tested at 35°C in ambient air are presented in Table 1. The three formulations tested showed similar results with the more concentrated inocula of suspensions A and B. With the more dilute suspension, suspension C, inaccurate results occurred more frequently with all medium formulations. These results include those obtained with the salt tolerance test-negative M. abscessus isolate.
|
Salt tolerance test results obtained after incubation at 28°C in ambient air with media from all manufacturers are presented in Table 2. At this temperature, all four isolates of M. chelonae gave false-positive results when tested with the 1 McFarland inoculum suspension (suspension A) and the barely turbid suspension (suspension B). With suspensions A and B all other organisms (except the salt tolerance test-negative M. abscessus isolate) gave the expected results.
|
With the dilute suspension, suspension C, at 28°C, two of the four M. chelonae isolates gave false-positive results with media from all three manufacturers; one M. chelonae isolate gave false-positive results with media from manufacturers 1 and 2, and another M. chelonae isolate gave false-positive results with media from manufacturer 3. Three of the six M. abscessus isolates (including the salt tolerance test-negative M. abscessus strain) gave false-negative results with media from all manufacturers. The result for one isolate of an M. abscessus variant on media from all manufacturers was uninterpretable, while one isolate gave false-negative results on media from two manufacturers. All other isolates gave correct results on all media.
Salt tolerance test results by species for all isolates tested at 35°C in ambient air are presented in Table 3. At this temperature, all isolates of M. chelonae gave the expected results with media from all manufacturers and with all inoculum concentrations. In addition to the salt tolerance test-negative isolate, one isolate of M. abscessus gave false-negative results with medium from manufacturer 2 with suspension A and with media from manufacturers 1 and 2 with suspension B. Additionally, with suspension B one M. peregrinum isolate gave false-negative results with the medium from manufacturer 2.
|
With suspension C, one isolate of M. peregrinum gave a false-negative result with slants from manufacturer 3, while another M. peregrinum isolate gave false-negative results with slants from manufacturers 1 and 2. In addition to the salt tolerance test-negative M. abscessus isolate, the result for one M. abscessus isolate was uninterpretable, one isolate was falsely negative with media from all manufacturers, and another isolate gave false-negative results with medium from manufacturer 2. For isolates of the genetic variant of M. abscessus, the result for one isolate was uninterpretable and two isolates each gave false-negative reactions with medium from manufacturer 1.
Table 4 compares the results of the salt tolerance tests incubated at 35°C in 5% CO2, 35°C in ambient air, and 30°C in ambient air. The selected isolates of M. fortuitum, M. mucogenicum, and M. peregrinum gave the expected results in all environments. One of five M. chelonae isolates gave false-positive results at 35°C in CO2, and all M. chelonae isolates gave false-positive results at 30°C in ambient air. One M. abscessus isolate gave the expected results in all three environments. The salt tolerance test-negative M. abscessus isolate gave negative results at 35°C in CO2 and positive results at 30°C, although growth at this temperature was tiny and difficult to interpret.
|
The average colony counts from suspensions A, B, and C for the five isolates tested were 1.2 × 108, 1.6 × 107, and 4.9 × 104 CFU/ml, respectively.
| |
DISCUSSION |
|---|
|
|
|---|
The first variable that was evaluated was the effect of medium manufacturer on the results of the salt tolerance test. This study shows that medium source does not contribute significantly to the variability of the test when tests are incubated at 35°C in ambient air (Table 1). The formulations of the three brands of medium tested were essentially identical. The differences in the results noted among the media from the various manufacturers were most significant with the dilute suspension, suspension C (Table 1). It appears that these differences are more likely related to inoculum concentration than to medium manufacturer.
An important variable in the salt tolerance test is the concentration of organisms in the inoculum. It appears that the inhibitory nature of the salt-containing medium, combined with low concentrations of organisms in the inoculum, could lead to false-negative results, especially for M. abscessus. The best results are obtained when slants are inoculated with a high concentration of organisms. Overall, suspension A gave the best results at all temperatures, while suspension B gave only slightly fewer incorrect results (Tables 2 and 3). Suspension C gave the largest number of incorrect results (Tables 2 and 3) and also produced the only tests which were considered uninterpretable due to low inocula (fewer than 50 colonies on the control slant).
It was useful to standardize the suspensions used here to ensure that sufficient numbers of organisms were present in the inoculum. In practice, organism suspensions prepared by visual comparison to a 1 McFarland standard suspension appear to be less dense than those prepared spectrophotometrically. We therefore recommend the suspension standardization procedure described herein. More than half of the organism suspensions reached the target percent T within 6 days of incubation at 28°C. Some suspensions of M. abscessus and M. abscessus variant, although displaying heavy growth in TAB, did not attain the target percent T by day 8, perhaps because of the tendency of the organisms to grow in clumps. Control slants inoculated with suspensions A and B of these organisms did show adequate growth at 35°C. In nine tests inoculated with suspension C, adequate growth was not achieved on the control slant. This failure to grow on the control slant illustrates the need for the use of a heavy inoculum prepared from a suspension which was vigorously vortexed with glass beads to distribute the organisms more uniformly.
Another important variable in the salt tolerance test is the incubation temperature. All isolates of M. fortuitum and M. mucogenicum gave the expected results at all temperatures tested (Tables 2, 3, and 4). Only one test (with slants from one manufacturer) with M. peregrinum gave a false-negative result with suspension B at 35°C (Table 3).
Two isolates of M. fortuitum biovar 3 (ATCC 49403 and ATCC 49404) also gave the expected positive results with inocula from a 1 McFarland suspension incubated at 35°C in ambient air (data not shown).
M. abscessus is generally expected to grow on salt-containing media (3), a characteristic which separates this species from M. chelonae. Overall, the results of the salt tolerance test for M. abscessus and the M. abscessus variant showed minimal deviation from the expected results when incubation was at 28 and 35°C with inocula containing high concentrations of organisms. The tendency for this organism to grow in clumps requires that inocula be prepared carefully; an adequately dense inoculum suspension will decrease the possibility of false-negative results. One of the 11 M. abscessus and M. abscessus variant isolates tested failed to grow on salt-containing media at either 28 or 35°C from any inoculum concentration (Tables 2 and 3). Wallace et al. (11) noted that some M. abscessus isolates are inhibited at temperatures higher than 28°C; it appears that some M. abscessus isolates may also be inhibited on salt-containing media at 28°C. This isolate also did not grow on salt-containing medium at 35°C in a CO2-enriched atmosphere when suspension A was used (Table 4). A fine film of growth was noted on media incubated at 30°C with an inoculum from suspension A (Table 4). The control LJs showed adequate growth at all temperatures for all inoculum concentrations. None of the M. abscessus or M. abscessus variant isolates studied failed to grow at 35°C when a large inoculum was used.
M. chelonae is generally expected to be salt tolerance test negative (3). With inocula from suspensions A and B, all M. chelonae isolates tested gave false-positive reactions when they were incubated at 28°C. Even with the very dilute suspension, suspension C, 9 of 12 tests gave false-positive results at 28°C. All M. chelonae isolates were also salt tolerance test positive when they were tested at 30°C, and one of five isolates was positive when tested at 35°C in 5% CO2 (Table 4). In contrast, all tests incubated at 35°C in ambient air (Table 3) gave the expected negative results. Kusunoki and Ezoki (5) previously noted these effects with a reference strain of M. chelonae. Silcox et al. (8) describes the profuse growth of M. chelonae at 28°C, and from the data presented here it appears that the stimulating effects of a lower temperature, and possibly those of a higher CO2 content as well, encourage the growth of M. chelonae and override the inhibitory effect of the salt-containing medium for this species.
The interpretation criteria for salt tolerance test results are also unclear. In this study positive reactions showed mostly confluent or nearly confluent growth on the salt-containing media with the more dense inocula. The criterion for positivity recommended by Kent and Kubica (3) (at least 50 colonies on the salt-containing media) appears to be appropriate for accurate test result interpretation. We would like to add that the presence of greater than 50 colonies of any size should be considered a positive reaction. Some M. abscessus or M. abscessus variant strains incubated at 35°C grew as pinpoint or tiny colonies growing over the surface of the slant. Slants should therefore be carefully examined to detect weakly positive strains.
The use of the LJ control is an important part of the performance of this test since the amount of growth that it shows gives an accurate estimation of the adequacy of the inoculum. Criteria for adequate growth on the control slant as specified by others include growth (1, 1b, 4), numerous colonies (3, 7), and positive (7a) to greater than 50 colonies (12). Since inoculum density appears to be a critical factor in test performance, we recommend that the control slant show more than 50 colonies for the test to be considered interpretable, because this number is also the recommended minimum needed on the salt-containing slant for a positive result (3). If 50 or fewer colonies are visible, the inoculum density is probably inadequate and an apparently negative salt tolerance test result may merely be due to an insufficient inoculum and not to inhibition of the isolate.
Several investigators have recommended the use of the carbon utilization test because it more reliably distinguishes between M. abscessus and M. chelonae (6, 8, 10, 11). Isolates of M. chelonae utilize citrate as a carbon source, while M. abscessus does not. This test medium appears to be used mostly in reference laboratories and until recently has not been commercially available, limiting its usefulness for many clinical laboratories. In our hands, several isolates identified as M. chelonae by REA have given negative or weakly positive citrate reactions (data not shown); more study of the parameters affecting the results of the citrate utilization test seems warranted.
The performance of the salt tolerance test can be improved with the use of well-dispersed inocula with concentrations spectrophotometrically equal to a 1 McFarland turbidity standard (or the use of an inoculum incubated for 8 days for organisms which do not attain a high enough concentration otherwise). Test and control slants should be incubated at 35°C in ambient air for 4 weeks. Salt-containing media and control slants should be examined carefully for the presence of greater than 50 colonies of any size. Isolates of M. abscessus that fail to grow in the salt tolerance test, such as the one that we encountered, are presumably rare. However, the routine use of a citrate utilization test may be helpful to increase the likelihood of the correct identification of such isolates. For those laboratories with the capability of performing them, molecular methodologies such as PCR and REA (1a, 9) are probably the most unambiguous methods for the rapid and accurate identification of these organisms.
| |
ACKNOWLEDGMENT |
|---|
We thank Nancy Hooper of the Mycobacteriology Laboratory of the Maryland State Health Department for providing us with clinical isolates for this investigation.
| |
FOOTNOTES |
|---|
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Microbiology Service, Clinical Pathology Department, National Institutes of Health, 10 Center Dr. MSC 1508, Bethesda, MD 20892-1508. Phone: (301) 496-4433. Fax: (301) 402-1886. E-mail: pconville{at}nih.gov.
| |
REFERENCES |
|---|
|
|
|---|
| 1. | BBL Microbiology, Systems. BBL product information. BBL Microbiology Systems, Cockeysville, Md. |
| 1a. | Conville, P. S., F. G. Witebsky, and C. P. Cartwright. 1996. Discrimination of two subtypes of Mycobacterium abscessus and variability in salt tolerance of isolates of M. abscessus, abstr. C10, p. 2. In Abstracts of the 96th General Meeting of American Society for Microbiology 1996. American Society for Microbiology, Washington, D.C. |
| 1b. | Difco Laboratories. Difco product insert. Difco Laboratories, Detroit, Mich. |
| 2. | Hance, A. J., et al. 1989. Detection and identification of mycobacteria by amplification of mycobacterial DNA. Mol. Microbiol. 3:843-849[Medline]. |
| 3. | Kent, P. T., and G. P. Kubica. 1985. Public health mycobacteriology: a guide for the level III laboratory. Centers for Disease Control, Atlanta, Ga. |
| 4. | Kubica, G. P. 1973. Differential identification of mycobacteria. Am. Rev. Respir. Dis. 107:9-21[Medline]. |
| 5. |
Kusunoki, S., and T. Ezaki.
1992.
Proposal of Mycobacterium peregrinum sp. nov., rev., and elevation of Mycobacterium chelonae subsp. abscessus (Kubica et al.) to species status: Mycobacterium abscessus comb. nov.
Int. J. Syst. Bacteriol.
42:240-245 |
| 6. |
Levy-Frebault, V.,
F. Grimont,
P. A. D. Grimont, and H. L. David.
1986.
Deoxyribonucleic acid relatedness study of the Mycobacterium fortuitum-Mycobacterium chelonae complex.
Int. J. Syst. Bacteriol.
36:458-460 |
| 7. | Lutz, B. 1994. Identification tests for mycobacteria, p. 3.12.19-3.12.20. In H. D. Isenberg (ed.), Clinical microbiology procedures handbook. American Society for Microbiology, Washington, D.C. |
| 7a. | Remel. Remel technical information. Remel, Lenexa, Kans. |
| 8. |
Silcox, V. A.,
R. C. Good, and M. M. Floyd.
1981.
Identification of clinically significant Mycobacterium fortuitum complex isolates.
J. Clin. Microbiol.
14:686-691 |
| 9. | Steingrube, V. A., J. L. Gibson, B. A. Brown, Y. Zhang, R. W. Wilson, M. Rajagopalan, and R. J. Wallace, Jr. 1995. PCR amplification and restriction endonuclease analysis of a 65-kilodalton heat shock protein gene sequence for taxonomic separation of rapidly-growing mycobacteria. J. Clin. Microbiol. 33:149-153[Abstract]. |
| 10. | Wallace, R. J., et al. 1992. Skin, soft tissue, and bone infections due to Mycobacterium chelonae chelonae: importance of prior corticosteroid therapy, frequency of disseminated infections, and resistance to oral antimicrobials other than clarithromycin. J. Infect. Dis. 166:405-412[Medline]. |
| 11. |
Wallace, R. J., Jr.,
V. A. Silcox,
M. Tsukamura,
B. A. Brown,
J. O. Kilburn,
W. R. Butler, and G. Onyi.
1993.
Clinical significance, biochemical features, and susceptibility patterns of sporadic isolates of the Mycobacterium chelonae-like organisms.
J. Clin. Microbiol.
31:3231-3239 |
| 12. | Witebsky, F. G., and P. Kruczak-Filipov. 1996. Identification of mycobacteria by conventional methods. Clin. Microbiol. Clin. Lab. Med. 16:569-601. |
This article has been cited by other articles:
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Antimicrob. Agents Chemother. | Clin. Microbiol. Rev. |
|---|---|
| Clin. Vaccine Immunol. | ALL ASM JOURNALS |
|---|