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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, November 2003, p. 4961-4965, Vol. 41, No. 11
0095-1137/03/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JCM.41.11.4961-4965.2003
Copyright © 2003, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Molecular Epidemiology of Proteus mirabilis Infections of the Catheterized Urinary Tract
N. A. Sabbuba,* E. Mahenthiralingam, and D. J. Stickler
Cardiff School of Biosciences, Cardiff University, Cardiff, United Kingdom
Received 22 April 2003/
Returned for modification 2 June 2003/
Accepted 4 August 2003

ABSTRACT
Proteus mirabilis compromises the care of many patients undergoing
long-term indwelling bladder catheterization. It forms crystalline
bacterial biofilms in catheters which block the flow of urine,
causing either incontinence due to leakage or painful distention
of the bladder due to urinary retention. If it is not dealt
with, catheter blockage can lead to pyelonephritis and septicemia.
We have examined the epidemiology of catheter-associated
P. mirabilis infections by use of pulsed-field gel electrophoresis
(PFGE) of
NotI restriction enzyme digests of bacterial DNA.
This technique was shown to be more discriminatory than the
classical phenotypic Dienes typing technique. We demonstrated
that each of 42 isolates from diverse environmental sources
and 10 of 12 isolates from blood, wound swabs, and mid-stream
urine samples of hospitalized patients had distinct genotypes.
Examination of a set of 55 isolates of
P. mirabilis, each from
a different clinical or environmental source, identified 49
distinct genotypes and 43 Dienes types. The index of discrimination
was 0.993 for the PFGE method and 0.988 for the Dienes method.
Applying the PFGE method to isolates from catheter-associated
urinary tract infections confirmed that the strains present
in the crystalline catheter biofilms were identical to those
isolated from the same patient's urine. An analysis of samples
taken during a prospective study of infections in catheterized
nursing home patients revealed that a single genotype of
P. mirabilis can persist in the urinary tract despite many changes
of catheter, periods of noncatheterization, and antibiotic therapy.

INTRODUCTION
A common complication in the care of patients undergoing long-term
bladder catheterization is recurrent encrustation and blockage
of catheters. The problem stems from infection by
Proteus mirabilis (
12,
19). These bacterial cells colonize the catheter surfaces,
forming biofilm communities embedded in a polysaccharide matrix.
The bacterial urease enzyme generates ammonia and elevates the
pH of the urine and the biofilm. Under these conditions, struvite
(magnesium ammonium phosphate) and apatite (calcium phosphate)
are formed and become trapped in the organic matrix which surrounds
the cells (
13). The continued development of this crystalline
biofilm completely blocks the catheter lumen, obstructing the
flow of urine and causing either incontinence due to leakage
or painful distention of the bladder due to urinary retention.
Bacteriuria is inevitably associated with the encrustation,
so retention and vesico-ureteral reflux can induce ascending
infection culminating in episodes of pyelonephritis, septicemia,
and shock (
9). All currently available types of Foley catheter
are vulnerable to encrustation, and currently, there are no
effective procedures for controlling the problem (
1,
9,
14).
Despite the clinical significance of these infections and the
occurrence of outbreaks in hospitals and nursing homes, previous
studies have not examined the molecular epidemiology of catheter-associated
P. mirabilis infections.
A well-known characteristic of P. mirabilis is its ability to swarm over the surface of agar media. Many years ago, Dienes (3) described a test for discrimination between strains of this species based on the mutual inhibition of different strains as they swarm towards each other on a plate. If strains are different, a clear line will form as the swarming fronts repel each other. If the strains are related, there is no mutual repulsion, the swarming fronts merge, and no line of demarcation develops. This simple test can thus be used to determine whether isolates are the same or different (5, 17, 18). More recently, Pfaller et al. (16) evaluated the discriminatory power of the Dienes test compared to that of ribotyping, a method that detects polymorphisms in the DNA encoding the rRNA operons. They concluded that the Dienes method was just as discriminatory as the genotyping technique and had the advantages that it was simple, inexpensive, and easy to perform.
This paper reports the application of pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE) of restriction enzyme digests of P. mirabilis DNA to the study of catheter-associated infections. The discriminatory power of the method was investigated, and then we examined aspects of the molecular epidemiology of chronic catheter-associated urinary tract infections which may have implications for the management of patients.

MATERIALS AND METHODS
Bacterial strains.
A collection of 118 isolates of
P. mirabilis from clinical and
environmental sources was studied (Table
1). Isolates were obtained
from the urine and encrusted catheters of patients being cared
for in their own homes, in two spinal injury centers, and in
a local nursing home in Glamorgan, Wales, United Kingdom. Isolates
from mid-stream urine specimens, blood cultures, and wound swabs
were also obtained from the microbiology laboratory of a large
general hospital. Environmental samples were collected from
river water, seawater, and sewage at a number of geographically
distinct sites. A subcollection of 55 isolates was drawn from
this main collection in order to evaluate the discriminatory
power of typing methods (see below). Cultures were identified
by Gram stain, indole reaction, and the BBL crystal identification
system (Beckton Dickinson Europe, Meylan, France). Isolates
were stored at -70°C in 5% (vol/vol) glycerol.
PFGE.
Genotyping of
P. mirabilis strains was conducted by macrorestriction
of bacterial DNA followed by separation of the resulting fragments
by PFGE. This was based on a method originally applied to
Burkholderia cepacia complex bacteria (
21) and adapted as follows. Overnight
cultures of
P. mirabilis in 3 ml of tryptone soy broth were
centrifuged to harvest bacterial cells. These were then resuspended
to an optical density at 600 nm of 1.0 in SE buffer (75 mM NaCl,
25 mM EDTA). Suspensions were warmed to 45°C and mixed with
an equal volume of molten 2% low-gelling-temperature agarose
(Type VII; Sigma Chemicals, Poole, United Kingdom). This mixture
was then pipetted into 70-µl disposable plug molds (Bio-Rad,
Hitchin, United Kingdom) and allowed to set at 4°C. Three
plugs per strain were placed in 15-ml sterile tubes containing
10 ml of Pen buffer (0.5 M EDTA and 1%
N-lauryl sarcosine) plus
pronase (Roche Biochemicals, Lewes, United Kingdom) at 1 mg/ml
and were subjected to 18 to 24 h of incubation at 37°C,
with gentle rocking. The plugs were washed with five volume
changes of TE buffer (10 mM Tris-HCl, 1 mM EDTA, pH 8.0). Slices
of the plugs (3-mm thick) were then subjected to restriction
endonuclease digestion overnight at 37°C. The digestion
mixture (150 µl) contained 5 U of
NotI enzyme (see Results)
and was set up in accordance with the manufacturer's recommendations
(New England BioLabs, Inc., Hitchin, United Kingdom). The plugs
were loaded into 1.2% agarose gels made with 1
x TBE buffer (Tris-boric
acid-EDTA) and sealed with 1.2% low-gelling-temperature agarose.
Bacterial DNA fragments were then separated by electrophoresis
at 6 V/cm for 8 h, with a switch time of 1 to 30 s, and then
for 16 h, with a switch time of 30 to 70 s, at 14°C by use
of a CHEF-DR II apparatus (Bio-Rad). Bacteriophage lambda DNA
ladders were included as size standards. Gels were then stained
with ethidium bromide, destained under running water, and photographed
under UV light. The epidemiological relationship of strains
to each other was assessed by use of the Tenover criteria (
20).
Dienes typing.
Dienes typing was performed as previously described (18). Isolates of P. mirabilis were plated for single colonies on CLED agar (Oxoid Ltd., Basingstoke, United Kingdom) and incubated overnight at 37°C. Single colonies from up to eight isolates were then inoculated as macro-colonies onto tryptone soy agar plates (Oxoid Ltd.). After overnight incubation at 37°C, those isolates showing a clear band (Dienes demarcation line) between each other were designated different Dienes types, while those with no such line were regarded as the same Dienes type. Comparisons of each isolate to all other isolates were made in triplicate.
Discriminatory index analysis.
To compare the efficacy of PFGE fingerprinting and Dienes testing for P. mirabilis strain typing, a representative subset of 55 isolates was analyzed. The subset comprised 36 clinical and 19 environmental isolates, each from a distinct source (Table 2). Four isolates were chosen to be representatives of a single known PFGE strain type. The remaining 51 were chosen at random from the collection. All isolates were then assigned an identification number and typed blindly by both Dienes testing and PFGE. In order to evaluate the discriminatory power of PFGE typing in comparison to Dienes testing, a discriminatory index was calculated as previously described (6).

RESULTS
Macrorestriction PFGE analysis for P. mirabilis typing.
Efficient PFGE typing of bacteria is heavily dependent on the
choice of a restriction enzyme that produces relatively few
DNA fragments. Previous studies have used the enzymes
SmaI,
XbaI,
SfiI, and
NotI for genotyping
P. mirabilis (
2,
11,
15,
16). Since
P. mirabilis DNA has a G+C content of 39% (
4), our
initial experiments aimed at identification of enzymes optimal
for typing of
P. mirabilis used enzymes having G+C-rich recognition
sequences.
AvaI,
BamHI, and
SmaI were shown to cut too frequently
and to produce many small-molecular-weight fragments, resulting
in profiles that were unsuitable for typing.
NotI and
SfiI both
produced clear restriction profiles, but we decided to optimize
the method by using
NotI, as this enzyme produced profiles that
were more readily interpretable.
Typing of environmental and clinical P. mirabilis isolates.
The efficacy of the NotI PFGE typing method was tested on representative collections of P. mirabilis recovered from raw sewage, seawater, river water, and clinical specimens. The environmental isolates were examined as representatives of potentially highly diverse and unrelated strains. The resulting profiles produced by PFGE of the NotI digests of P. mirabilis DNA isolated from raw sewage are presented in Fig. 1. It is clear that each isolate produced distinct macrorestriction profiles. A further 30 environmental isolates were typed, and all were unique strain types (data not shown).
An analysis of 12 clinical isolates obtained from blood, mid-stream
urine samples, or wound swabs from patients in a general hospital
showed 10 distinct profiles (Fig.
2). Two of the isolates that
gave identical profiles were from the blood and urine samples
of the same patient. The other 12 isolates from mid-stream urine
samples, blood cultures, and wound swabs (Table
1) gave 11 distinct
profiles (data not shown).
Comparison of PFGE typing and Dienes testing.
Strain typing by PFGE is time-consuming and requires special
equipment. The Dienes test, a simple culture-based phenotypic
inhibition test, has been widely applied to differentiate
P. mirabilis isolates. To evaluate strain typing efficacy, the
discriminatory power of PFGE of
NotI digests of bacterial DNA
was compared to that of the classical Dienes typing technique.
A random subset of 55 isolates of
P. mirabilis, each from a
different clinical or environmental source, were selected. With
the Dienes method, 43 distinct types were identified. The same
set of isolates produced 49 distinct PFGE fingerprint types
(Table
3). The discriminatory index for each typing method was
calculated using the generalized formula proposed by Hunter
(
6) and was found to be 0.988 for the Dienes test and 0.993
for PFGE.
Molecular epidemiology of catheter-associated infections.
In order to determine the epidemiology of catheter-associated
urinary tract infections, genetic typing was performed on a
collection of 19 isolates from catheter biofilms and 33 isolates
from catheter urine samples (Table
1). The results of the analysis
of six
P. mirabilis isolates from the urine and crystalline
biofilms on catheters of three patients residing in a local
nursing home are presented in Fig.
3. The macrorestriction profiles
of the
P. mirabilis strains isolated from the urine and catheter
of each patient were identical. In addition, two of the patients
were infected with organisms possessing identical PFGE fingerprints.
During the course of a prospective study on the urinary flora
of patients with indwelling catheters at a local nursing home,
we isolated
P. mirabilis repeatedly from the urine of one patient
over a period of 121 days. Results of PFGE analysis of the DNA
from 14 of these isolates and 2 isolates from catheters removed
from this patient are shown in Fig.
4. These patterns indicate
that the same strain was colonizing the urinary tract of this
patient, even though over the 121 days the patient had undergone
eight changes of catheter, an 8-day course of antibiotics (during
which
P. mirabilis was isolated from the urine on the first
2 days but not thereafter), and a 20-day period during which
the bladder was not catheterized.

DISCUSSION
The lack of effective procedures for the control and prevention
of catheter encrustation by crystalline
P. mirabilis biofilms
means that currently the problem is handled by management of
the clinical crises as they arise (
7). The usual approach is
simply to replace the blocked catheter. The subsequent catheters
commonly block rapidly, however, and the patient gains a reputation
as a "blocker" (
10). While there is clearly a need to improve
catheter design and to develop novel biomaterials that are less
vulnerable to colonization by
P. mirabilis (
8), it is also important
to gain a better understanding of the epidemiology of these
infections. To facilitate this approach, we used a PFGE-based
genotyping method for
P. mirabilis and demonstrated that it
was capable of distinguishing unrelated strains isolated from
diverse environmental and clinical sources (Fig.
1 and
2). The
NotI macrorestriction profiles of
P. mirabilis DNA obtained
by PFGE proved to be highly discriminatory, giving a slightly
better discrimination index than the classical Dienes method
(Table
3).
A recent study by Pfaller et al. (16) used the Dienes test and the genotyping method of ribotyping to discriminate between 63 clinical isolates of P. mirabilis. They reported that both methods worked well, producing discrimination indexes of 0.980 for the Dienes test and 0.979 for ribotyping. Isolates that were indistinguishable by the Dienes test and/or ribotyping were characterized further by a PFGE method based on the use of the restriction enzyme SfiI. Forty of the isolates represented 40 different ribotypes and Dienes types. The other 23 isolates were grouped into 12 ribotypes, 13 Dienes types, and 14 PFGE types. Pfaller et al. (16) concluded that as the Dienes test is simple, inexpensive, and easy to perform and has good discriminatory powers, it should be the method of choice for the epidemiological characterization of P. mirabilis isolates. The results summarized in Table 3, however, indicate that PFGE based on the use of the NotI enzyme is more discriminatory than the Dienes test for P. mirabilis. While strains designated different by Dienes typing were all confirmed to have distinct genotypes, there were several cases for which Dienes typing did not distinguish between strains from diverse sources that had been shown to be distinct by PFGE. The isolates NP22, -38, and -56, for example, which were from river water from France, a catheter biofilm, and sewage from South Wales, respectively, were designated the same strain by Dienes but were clearly distinct by PFGE (Table 3). A further potential advantage of the genotyping method is that analysis of the DNA profiles by specialized software could be used to construct dendrograms showing the relatedness of all the isolates. This could provide epidemiological data that would not be available by Dienes typing.
Having established the discriminatory power of the NotI PFGE-based method, we went on to examine for the first time the molecular epidemiology of P. mirabilis catheter-associated urinary tract infections. The results confirmed that the organisms present on the crystalline biofilms encrusting catheters were identical to those isolated from the same patient's urine (Fig. 3). In several instances, Dienes analysis corroborated the epidemiological observations made by PFGE. For example, both methods confirmed that isolates (NP1 to NP4) from the catheter biofilms and urine samples of two catheterized patents residing in a nursing home were identical (Fig. 3 and Table 3). Isolates NP5 and NP6, from the catheter and urine, respectively, of a third patient at the nursing home, possessed different Dienes types, which was also confirmed by PFGE fingerprinting (Fig. 3 and Table 3).
Problems with potential cross-contamination of catheters were identified, as was the failure of both replacing catheters and antibiotic therapy as a means to control chronic infections (Fig. 3 and 4). The remarkable stability and persistence of a strain of P. mirabilis in a catheterized urinary tract were also revealed. These novel molecular epidemiological observations highlight challenges in the clinical management of P. mirabilis catheter-associated infections.
Many questions about the epidemiology and pathogenesis of P. mirabilis infections of the catheterized bladder need answers. Are the strains that cause catheter encrustation a particular subset of the species? Are the patients who suffer from recurrent catheter encrustation fecal carriers of the strain of P. mirabilis that forms the crystalline biofilms? Many patients who suffer recurrent catheter encrustation have been found to have bladder stones. Do these stones harbor the P. mirabilis strain that colonizes successive catheters? Application of the PFGE typing method to examine these questions could lead to the development of more effective strategies for controlling the complications caused by P. mirabilis in the care of the many patients enduring long-term indwelling bladder catheterization.

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Cardiff School of Biosciences, Cardiff University, Main Building, Park Place, Cardiff CF10 3TL, United Kingdom. Phone: 44 290 20876331. Fax: 44 290 20874305. E-mail:
Sabbuba{at}cardiff.ac.uk.


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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, November 2003, p. 4961-4965, Vol. 41, No. 11
0095-1137/03/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JCM.41.11.4961-4965.2003
Copyright © 2003, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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