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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, April 2002, p. 1511-1513, Vol. 40, No. 4
0095-1137/02/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JCM.40.4.1511-1513.2002
Copyright © 2002, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Northeastern University,1 Massachusetts General Hospital,2 Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts,4 Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts3
Received 20 November 2001/ Returned for modification 20 December 2001/ Accepted 23 January 2002
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Gastric biopsy specimens were obtained from patients by esophagogastroduodenal (EGD) endoscopy and inoculated into RUT kits (CLOtest; Ballard Medical Products, Draper, Utah). One hundred twenty-six gastric biopsy specimens were recovered from RUT-negative specimens. The biopsy specimens were processed and evaluated for the presence of Helicobacter genus-specific 16S ribosomal DNA (rDNA; 422 bp) (forward primer, 5'-GCT ATG ACG GGT ATC C; reverse primer, 5' -GAT TTT ACC CCT ACA CCA) and H. pylori-specific glmM DNA (forward primer, 5'-AAG CTT ACT TTC TAA CAC TAA CGC; reverse primer, 5'-AAG CTT TTA GGG GTG TTA GGG GTT T) (6) sequences by PCR, as described previously (8).
All biopsy specimens positive for the 16S rDNA but negative for glmM amplicons were further analyzed by DNA sequencing. Two overlapping portions of the 16S rDNA were cloned into pCR4-TOPO vectors (Invitrogen, Carlsbad, Calif.) and sequenced. Segments of the 16S rRNA gene were analyzed by PCR amplification and sequencing analysis. PCR conditions were as follows: an initial denaturation (94°C, 5 min), followed by 40 cycles of denaturation (94°C, 30 s), annealing (50°C, 1 min), and extension (72°C, 2 min), with a final extension (72°C, 8 min). Sequencing was performed in an ABI Prism 310 Genetic Analyzer (Applied Biosystems, Foster City, Calif.) by use of ABI Prism Big Dye Terminator Cycle Sequencing Ready Reaction kit chemistry, according to the recommendations of the manufacturer. DNA sequence comparisons were performed by analyses of the sequences in public sequence databases (GenBank and Ribosomal Database Project II) with the Blastn and Sequence Match tools. To determine the specificity of glmM sequences as markers for H. pylori, we evaluated the specificity of glmM amplification with various gastric and enteric helicobacters (Fig. 1). Most urease-negative specimens (118 of 126) lacked Helicobacter DNA. Helicobacter 16S rDNA was detected in 8 of 126 (6%) specimens, while they appeared to be urease negative by RUT. Of these eight specimens, three tissue samples tested positive for glmM DNA, indicating the presence of H. pylori, and were not further analyzed. Three of the remaining five gastric biopsy specimens yielded glmM DNA at low levels, while two specimens were negative for glmM amplicons (Fig. 2). Sequence analysis of the bacterial 16S rDNA sequences of glmM DNA-positive specimens 48, 61, and 64 confirmed the presence of H. pylori. Two glmM DNA-negative samples (specimens 3 and 4) contained 16S rDNA sequences identified as H. cinaedi with 100% identity. These sequences spanned nucleotide positions 270 to 668 (398 and 398 bp, respectively). The presence of H. cinaedi in both patients was verified by sequencing an overlapping 537-nucleotide fragment within the 5' portion of 16S rDNA, representing nucleotides 8 through 544 (660 bp of the 16S rRNA gene was sequenced in total). Gastric biopsy specimens 3 and 4 failed to yield glmM amplicons. In contrast, multiple differences (97% identity; 390 of 398 bp) were observed when Helicobacter-specific sequences were compared with the H. pylori 16S rDNA sequence (Fig. 3). In one patient, the EGD endoscopic impression was consistent with erosive gastritis and a normal duodenum. Upon histopathologic inspection, eosinophilic gastritis with antral pit abscesses and lymphoid aggregates in the fundic mucosa were reported in this patient. In the second patient, duodenal ulcer disease with a normally appearing gastric mucosa was visualized by EGD endoscopy. Interestingly, the second patient had a history of colitis with histopathologic findings consistent with lymphocytic colitis.
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FIG. 1. Species specificity of glmM primers for H. pylori. Lanes: M, 100-bp molecular mass marker; 1, H. bilis; 2, H. canis; 3, H. cholecystus; 4, H. cinaedi; 5, H. hepaticus; 6, H. mustelae; 7, H. muridarum; 8, H. pullorum; 9, H. pylori; 10, negative. Only H. pylori yielded the 294-bp glmM amplicon among the various species of Helicobacter tested.
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FIG. 2. Detection of H. pylori in gastric biopsy samples by glmM PCR. PCR amplification of glmM DNA sequences shows that specimens 3 and 4 lacked H. pylori DNA, while specimens 48, 61, and 64 were faintly positive for H. pylori glmM DNA. Lane Hp, H. pylori Sydney strain control; lane N, negative control; lane M, 100-bp molecular mass marker.
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FIG. 3. Sequence alignment of 16S rRNA gene fragments from biopsy specimens and GenBank sequences. Sequences from biopsy samples (CLO-3a and -4a) yielded 100% identity with the sequence of H. cinaedi CCUG 33804, while they had less than 97% identity with the sequence of H. pylori. Multiple-nucleotide differences between H. pylori and the H. cinaedi sequences are boxed.
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H. cinaedi causes gastroenteritis (9) and extraintestinal infections, especially in immunocompromised patients, as reviewed elsewhere (1). H. cinaedi bacteremia has been associated with multifocal cellulitis and monoarticular arthritis. This organism has not previously been documented in the gastric antrum. Gastric helicobacters other than H. pylori have been associated with gastritis and peptic ulcer disease in humans, including "H. heilmannii" (2), while H. felis was detected in a gastric biopsy specimen of a Melanesian patient with dyspepsia (3). "H. heilmannii" has been associated with gastritis (4) but has rarely been recovered by culture. Due to the special requirements for culture and isolation of gastric and enteric helicobacters (12), molecular biology-based diagnostic methods facilitate the detection and identification of these organisms in gastric biopsy specimens. An earlier study reported on the molecular biology-based detection of urease-negative H. pylori (10) in chronic gastritis patients, but that organism may have been misidentified. Using several parameters for diagnosis of H. pylori, Ren et al. (10) determined that several chronic gastritis patients were infected with H. pylori, even though they were negative by the CLOtest, culture, and glmM PCR, because biopsy samples were positive for ahpC and histopathologic inspection showed helical bacterial forms. The 26-kDa protein encoded by ahpC, originally considered a specific marker for H. pylori, was subsequently shown to be elaborated by a number of helicobacters, including H. cinaedi (7). It may be possible that these reported urease-negative organisms were not strains of H. pylori but urease-negative helicobacters such as H. cinaedi. A recent study underlines the importance of accurate interpretation of 16S rRNA sequence information for helicobacters, including H. cinaedi (11). Our findings suggest that enterohepatic helicobacters such as H. cinaedi may be considered potential etiologic agents of human gastroduodenal disease. Further investigations of the role of H. cinaedi in gastroduodenal disease are warranted.
This study represents the first report of a urease-negative, enterohepatic helicobacter in the human stomach. Although these organisms were previously associated with extragastric infections, the role of these organisms in the pathogenesis of chronic gastritis or peptic ulcer disease remains unclear.
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