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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, March 2003, p. 1295-1298, Vol. 41, No. 3
0095-1137/03/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JCM.41.3.1295-1298.2003
Copyright © 2003, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Identification of Histoplasma capsulatum from Culture Extracts by Real-Time PCR
Jose Martagon-Villamil,1 Nabin Shrestha,1,2 Mary Sholtis,2 Carlos M. Isada,1,2 Gerri S. Hall,2 Terry Bryne,3 Barbara A. Lodge,3 L. Barth Reller,3 and Gary W. Procop2*
Division of Infectious Diseases,1
Section of Clinical Microbiology, The Cleveland Clinic Foundation, Cleveland, Ohio,2
Department of Clinical Microbiology, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, North Carolina3
Received 24 September 2002/
Returned for modification 18 November 2002/
Accepted 1 December 2002

ABSTRACT
We designed and tested a real-time LightCycler PCR assay for
Histoplasma capsulatum that correctly identified the 34
H.
capsulatum isolates in a battery of 107 fungal isolates tested and also
detected
H.
capsulatum in clinical specimens from three patients
that were culture positive for this organism.

TEXT
Histoplasma capsulatum is a slow-growing, dimorphic fungus that
causes disease that ranges from focal and self-limited to disseminated
and rapidly fatal (
15,
19). Immunocompromised individuals, particularly
those with advanced AIDS, are at risk for disseminated histoplasmosis
(
19,
20). A variety of tests are used in the laboratory for
the diagnosis of histoplasmosis, but all have limitations. Histoplasma
antigen detection in urine and/or serum has a variable range
of sensitivity, depending on the clinical pattern, the chronicity
of the affliction, and the underlying condition of the patient
(
6). The sensitivity of the
Histoplasma urinary antigen test
is as high as 97% in AIDS patients with disseminated histoplasmosis
but ranges from 20 to 81% in nonimmunosuppressed patients with
acute pulmonary histoplasmosis (
6,
18,
22,
23). Serologic testing
by immunodiffusion and complement fixation also has utility,
but both false-positive and false-negative results may occur.
False-positive serologic tests may be seen in patients with
other disseminated mycoses, while false-negative results may
occur in immunocompromised individuals who are unable to produce
an antibody response (
20,
21). Histopathologic analysis of tissue
is also useful but is dependent upon adequate sampling, the
experience of the observer, and the histochemical stains used
(
9,
15). Unfortunately,
H.
capsulatum may be misidentified in
histologic sections because of the variety of morphologically
similar small yeast forms, such as
Candida glabrata and
Sporothrix schenckii. Culture, which is often considered the "gold standard,"
is limited by the slow growth of the organism, which may take
more than 20 days to grow. In addition, confirmatory tests are
needed for organisms suspected to be
H.
capsulatum because saprophytic
morphological mimics of the mold phase of the organism exist
(
3,
7,
15). Confirmatory assays include the
H.
capsulatum AccuProbe
(Gen-Probe, Inc., San Diego, Calif.), exoantigen testing, and
temperature-induced mycelium-to-yeast conversion. The development
of a real-time rapid PCR method that could be used as an alternate
method of culture confirmation and potentially to test clinical
specimens directly is warranted.
The LightCycler PCR system (Roche Molecular Biochemicals, Indianapolis, Ind.) affords nucleic acid amplification and detection in a closed system in a real-time format. We designed a real-time PCR assay for the detection of H. capsulatum that targeted the internal transcribed spacer region of the rRNA gene complex (GenBank accession number AB055231) and used hybridization probes and fluorescent resonance energy transfer technology. We used Hcap-F (5'-TTGTCTACCGGACCTG-3') as the forward primer and Hcap-R (5'-TTCTTCATCGATGTCGGAAC-3') as the reverse primer. The first hybridization probe of the pair was Hcap HP-1, which had the 3' end labeled with fluorescein isothiocyanate; the sequence of the probe was 5'-ACGATTGGCGTCTGAGC-3'-fluorescein isothiocyanate. The second hybridization probe of the pair was Hcap HP-2, which had the 5' end labeled with Red 640-hydroxysuccinimide ester (640) and the 3' end phosphorylated (P) to prevent probe extension; the sequence of the probe was 640-5'-GAGAGCGATAATAATCCAGTCAAAAC-3'-P. The LightCycler hybridization kit (Roche Molecular Biochemicals) was used with 4 µM MgCl2, the forward and reverse primers at 0.5 µM each, 0.2 µM Hp-1, and 0.4 µM Hp-2. A standard reaction volume of 20 µl was used for each LightCycler capillary tube, which consisted of 15 µl of master mix and 5 µl of organism lysate or clinical specimen DNA extract. Capillary tubes were centrifuged for 5 s at 3,000 rpm to ensure that the reaction mixture was in the bottom of the capillary tubes. The LightCycler program consisted of four consecutive phases: (i) an enzyme activation phase (10 min at 95°C), (ii) a cycling program (45 cycles of 10 s at 95°C, 10 s at 55°C, and 20 s at 72°C), (iii) a melting phase (40 to 95°C at 0.1°C/s), and (iv) a cooling phase (3 min at 40°C). The F2/F1 mode was used for both quantification and melting curve analysis, as provided by the LightCycler software. Optimization experiments were performed that examined MgCl2 concentrations of 2, 3, and 4 µM; forward and reverse primers concentrations of 0.25, 0.5, and 1 µM; and hybridization probe concentrations of 0.2 and 0.4 µM in all possible combinations (data not shown). The optimal concentrations were those given above.
We tested the H. capsulatum LightCycler PCR assay on 107 cultured fungal isolates, which included 34 isolates of H. capsulatum (Table 1). The other fungi tested included closely related fungi (i.e., strains of Blastomyces dermatitidis), fungi that are similar to the tissue phase of H. capsulatum (C. glabrata and Penicillium marneffei), and a variety of yeasts and molds that are commonly encountered in the clinical mycology laboratory. The majority of the molds were identified by their growth characteristics, as well as their microscopic and colonial morphology. The isolates of H. capsulatum, B. dermatitidis, and C. immitis were confirmed by their respective AccuProbes (GenProbe Inc., San Diego, Calif.). The isolates of P. marneffei were identified by the presence of a red diffusible pigment in the agar, colonial and microscopic morphology, and temperature-induced mycelium-to-yeast conversion. The yeast isolates were identified by using a combination of germ tube and urea testing, the Vitek Yeast-ID card (bioMérieux, St. Louis, Mo.), and morphology on cornmeal agar.
A pure culture of each isolate was maintained on potato dextrose
agar (Becton Dickinson Biosciences, Sparks, Md.). A 0.5-mm loopful
of each fungus was tested. The loopful of yeast was recovered
without complication; the loopful from the mold isolates was
recovered by using two loops, one to recover the fungus and
the second to remove adherent agar from the hyphal mat. The
test sample of each isolate was then placed into 500 µl
of a lysis buffer that has been previously described, which
contained 1% Triton X-100, 0.5% Tween 20, and 10 mM Tris-HCl
(pH 8.0) (
13). The suspension was vortexed vigorously for 1
min, boiled for 15 min at 100°C, vortexed again, and boiled
for another 15 min. Tris-EDTA buffer was used as the negative
control, and a lysate of an American Type Culture Collection
(ATCC) isolate of
H.
capsulatum (ATCC 38904) was used as the
positive control. Of the 107 fungal isolates tested, only the
34 isolates of
H.
capsulatum were positive by either quantitation
or melting curve analysis (Fig.
1). The average hybridization
melting temperature for the PCR from the isolates was 62.71°C
(range, 58.45 to 64.95°C); the lower melting temperature
may have been due to a mutation in the probe hybridization site,
but this remains speculative. All of the other fungi were negative
by both the quantitation and melting curve analyses. This assay
was 100% sensitive and 100% specific for the detection and differentiation
of
H.
capsulatum from other cultured fungal isolates.
In addition, we tested clinical specimens from three immunosuppressed
patients with culture-proven histoplasmosis. The first specimen
was a bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) sample that contained small
yeast cells suspected to be
H.
capsulatum; the BAL sample was
culture positive for
H.
capsulatum. The second specimen was
an open-lung biopsy sample that contained small yeast cells
suspected to be
H.
capsulatum in the corresponding histopathologic
specimen; it was also culture positive for
H.
capsulatum. Three
specimens were available from the third patient, who had disseminated
histoplasmosis and a bone marrow biopsy sample positive for
H.
capsulatum. We tested a bone marrow biopsy specimen that
was fixed in B5 fixative and paraffin embedded, a bone marrow
clot sample that was fixed in formalin and paraffin embedded,
and a peripheral blood sample that was in EDTA. All specimens
were extracted with the Qiagen Tissue/Blood Extraction kit (QIAmp,
Valencia, Calif.). The fixed and paraffin-embedded specimens
were deparaffinized prior to nucleic acid extraction with AutoDeWax
(Invitrogen Corporation, Carlsbad, Calif.). The tissue specimens
were digested with the protease K included in the Qiagen kit,
and nucleic acid extraction was performed in accordance with
the manufacturer's guidelines. The final nucleic acid extract
volume was 100 µl. All of the clinical specimens, with
the exception of the B5 fixed bone marrow biopsy sample, were
positive for
H.
capsulatum by real-time PCR. The average melting
temperature for the PCR from the clinical specimens was 64.68°C
(range, 63.86 to 65.26°C). The failure to detect
H.
capsulatum in the specimen fixed in B5 was expected because it is well
known that the B5 fixative is inhibitory to the PCR (
17). Of
particular interest was the positive PCR result obtained with
the EDTA blood specimen from this same patient with disseminated
histoplasmosis; the blood cultures that corresponded to the
EDTA blood draw from which the PCR was positive were negative
by lysis-centrifugation culture, but a subsequent lysis-centrifugation
blood culture was positive. This patient was
Histoplasma urinary
antigen test (Specialty Laboratories, Santa Monica, Calif.)
negative throughout his clinical course.
The diagnostic workup for patients suspected to have histoplasmosis includes a variety of laboratory tests, each of which has its own strengths and limitations. The culture of H. capsulatum from clinical specimens is usually sufficient for the diagnosis of histoplasmosis, as this organism is not a common laboratory contaminant. However, confirmatory testing of culture isolates that resemble H. capsulatum is necessary, since rare saprophytic molds, such as Sepedonium species (Linx and Greville, 1824), may produce tuberculate macroconidia (15). Isolates suspected to be H. capsulatum may be confirmed by temperature-induced mycelium-to-yeast conversion or exoantigen testing, but these are time consuming and technically complex, respectively. The development of the H. capsulatum AccuProbe (GenProbe) was a significant advance in the rapid confirmation of culture isolates suspected of being H. capsulatum (3, 7, 12).
PCR-based methods of detection have been described for a variety of clinically important fungi, including Cryptococcus neoformans, Aspergillus and Candida species, and H. capsulatum (1, 2, 5, 8, 11). PCR assays for H. capsulatum have been used to detect this fungus in experimentally infected mice and compared with standard histochemistry staining methods and in infected human tissues (1, 2). A PCR-based assay for random amplified polymorphic DNA analysis has also been described that allowed the characterization of endemic H. capsulatum strains in Thailand (13). The genes that encode the rRNA subunits and associated genes, such as the internal transcribed spacer region, have been shown to be useful for the molecular identification of many fungi (4, 7, 8, 11, 16). A PCR assay designed to detect sequences in the 18S rRNA gene has been shown to be useful for the detection of Aspergillus and Candida species, with a sensitivity of 100% and a specificity of 98% (5). Similarly, a PCR-enzyme immunoassay method using universal fungal primers for rRNA genes was found to be highly specific for differentiating yeast-like pathogens (10).
This study demonstrates that the real-time PCR assay described is another method, available to laboratories that utilize this technology, that may be used for the confirmation of culture isolates suspected to be H. capsulatum. This assay was 100% sensitive and 100% specific for the differentiation of H. capsulatum from other cultured fungi that may be encountered in the clinical mycology laboratory. There was no cross-reactivity of this assay with genetically related fungi, such as B. dermatitidis, or with fungi that have forms that may be morphologically similar to the tissue form of H. capsulatum, such as C. glabrata, S. schenckii, or P. marneffei.
Detection of H. capsulatum in the three clinical specimens from patients with culture-proven histoplasmosis in no way suggests this test has been validated as a method for the direct assessment of clinical specimens. It does, however, suggest that more studies are needed that compare this method with other established assays used for the diagnosis of histoplasmosis. Similarly, more studies are needed to assess the usefulness of this technology for the detection and differentiation of H. capsulatum from morphologically similar yeast in formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded tissues.

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Clinical Microbiology, Cleveland Clinic Foundation/L40, 9500 Euclid Ave., Cleveland, OH 44195. Phone: (216) 444-5879. Fax: (216) 445-6984. E-mail:
procopg{at}ccf.org.


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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, March 2003, p. 1295-1298, Vol. 41, No. 3
0095-1137/03/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JCM.41.3.1295-1298.2003
Copyright © 2003, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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