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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, June 2005, p. 2651-2655, Vol. 43, No. 6
0095-1137/05/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JCM.43.6.2651-2655.2005
Copyright © 2005, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Department of Clinical Sciences, College of Veterinary Medicine, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, North Carolina 27606
Received 29 October 2004/ Returned for modification 24 December 2004/ Accepted 30 January 2005
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Because Bartonella species frequently induce persistent intravascular infections, it has been difficult to attribute chronic disease causation to infection in humans and companion animals; much of this difficulty may be related to the few and often very subtle clinical abnormalities that are reported by a patient or observed in a sick animal. Confirming disease causation is especially difficult in retrospective or prospective animal studies in which Bartonella bacteremia can be detected in overtly healthy, natural reservoir hostsa paradigm in opposition to Koch's postulates for disease causation (12, 23). Nevertheless, an increasingly diverse spectrum of Bartonella-associated infections have been recognized in people and in dogs due to the development of new approaches to improving serologic and molecular diagnostic testing methods, which prove to be, in most instances, more sensitive than conventional culture methods for the isolation of Bartonella species (13, 15, 26, 30, 33, 38, 41, 46, 49). Primary isolation of Bartonella species following lysis centrifugation, or freezing of a blood sample, followed by application to a blood agar plate, is the most widely used method for the microbiological diagnosis of bartonellosis. Isolation of Bartonella species on a blood agar plate generally requires a prolonged incubation period (an average of 21 days) and is rarely successful, unless the patient or animal is infected with a retrovirus or is receiving immunosuppressive drug therapy, or unless the animal is a reservoir host for the given Bartonella species. To date, alternative methods of isolation have not proven to be of significant diagnostic utility, and no suitable liquid medium that will support the growth of all or most medically important Bartonella species has been described. Previous reports have described the growth of only one or a few Bartonella species, or isolation of Bartonella species only from experimentally infected animals (13, 18, 33).
In this report, we describe a novel liquid culture medium that will support the growth of at least seven Bartonella species. This medium will also support cocultures of different Bartonella species and may also facilitate the primary isolation of B. henselae from the blood and aqueous fluid of naturally infected cats.
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Growth medium. The liquid growth medium described in this work (referred to below as Bartonella-Alphaproteobacteria growth medium [BAPGM]) was formulated on the basis of the biochemical composition of the insect growth medium DS2 from Mediatech (Herndon, VA). BAPGM was formulated to create an efficient growth medium for all of the Bartonella species described above. BAPGM was prepared by supplementing 900 ml of DS2 medium with 0.1 mg of NAD, 1.25 mg of NADP, 2 mg of ATP, 2 mg of sodium pyruvate, and 2 g of yeast extract. Amino acid supplementation was accomplished by adding 63.2 mg of L-arginine · HCl, 15.6 mg of L-cystine · HCl, 20.95 mg of L-histidine, 26.25 mg each of L-isoleucine and L-leucine, 36.25 mg of L-lysine, 7.5 mg of L-methionine, 16.25 mg of L-phenylalanine, 23.8 mg of L-threonine, 5 mg of L-tryptophan, 21.6 mg of L-tyrosine · 2Na · 2H2O, and 23.4 mg of L-valine. The pH of BAPGM was adjusted to 7.4 by addition of 50 ml of 0.1 M phosphate buffer, and BAPGM was subsequently sterilized by filtration through a 0.2-µm-pore-size filter (Corning, Corning, NY). After filtration, BAPGM was supplemented with 50 ml of defibrinated sheep blood (to a final concentration of 5%, vol/vol).
Growth experiments: single and multiple Bartonella species. In order to establish the growth-promoting characteristics of the medium, single as well as polymicrobial (two different species) Bartonella species were inoculated into BAPGM, after which the cultures were maintained at 35°C in a 5% CO2, water-saturated atmosphere. Colonies of single Bartonella species were swabbed from the surface of 5- to 7-day-old blood agar plate subcultures and were resuspended in sucrose-phosphate-glutamate (SPG) buffer. An SPG suspension aliquot of 100 µl of B. henselae or B. quintana (for quantitative growth characterization), or of B. clarridgeiae, B. elizabethae, B. grahamii, B. vinsonii (berkhoffii), or B. doshiae (for qualitative growth characterization) was inoculated into individual flasks containing 10 ml of BAPGM and cultured at 35°C. The growth of each liquid culture group was monitored for 7 to 12 days by inoculation of 100 µl onto blood agar plates every 24 h for colony quantification and by conventional PCR.
Coculture experiments were conducted by inoculating approximately 2 x 104 to 3 x 104 CFU (inoculum was subsequently determined by blood agar plate colony counts) of B. henselae and B. quintana, B. henselae and B. vinsonii (berkhoffii), or B. quintana and B. vinsonii (berkhoffii) into 10 ml of BAPGM. The growth of each liquid coculture was monitored by PCR testing at 3, 5, and 7 days following inoculation.
Naturally infected cat samples. Blood and/or aqueous fluid was submitted for diagnostic evaluation from two different cats (cat A and cat B). A 300-µl aliquot of EDTA-anticoagulated blood was submitted from cat A, which had a <1:16 antibody titer to B. henselae by indirect immunofluorescent antibody (IFA) testing conducted in our laboratory. Cat A was tested because the cat resides in the same household as a dog that was positive by real-time PCR for B. henselae DNA and had consistently elevated B. henselae IFA titers (1:64 and 1:128) over a 6-month period. Additionally, 300 µl of EDTA-blood and 100 µl of aqueous fluid from cat B were submitted because of severe uveitis; cat B had a B. henselae antibody titer of 1:256, and B. henselae DNA was detected in both the blood and aqueous fluid by conventional and real-time PCR. An aliquot (150 µl) of each of the two EDTA-blood samples and 300 µl of a 1:5 dilution in SPG buffer of the aqueous fluid sample from cat B were inoculated into 5 ml of BAPGM and cultured as described above for 7 days. Growth and colony formation in liquid cultures were determined by plating 100-µl aliquots onto commercialized blood agar plates and incubating at 35°C in a 5% CO2, water-saturated atmosphere for 7 days. Colonies observed on the blood agar plates were subsequently isolated for characterization by species-specific conventional PCR. The remaining150-µl aliquots of each of the two EDTA-blood samples and 200 µl of the 1:5 dilution of the cat B aqueous fluid sample were inoculated onto commercialized blood agar plates and incubated at 35°C in a 5% CO2, water-saturated atmosphere for 5 weeks.
DNA extraction and PCR screening of bacterial cultures. Screening of each Bartonella species in liquid and solid media from single-organism cultures, cocultures, and isolates of the two naturally infected cats was performed by conventional PCR. DNA was prepared from 200 µl of each liquid culture, or from a resuspension (in Tris-EDTA buffer) of several colonies from the blood agar plate isolates using the QIAamp DNA minikit (QIAGEN Inc., Valencia, CA). After extraction, DNA concentration and purity were measured using an absorbance ratio between 260 and 280 nm.
Conventional PCR analysis. PCR species screening was performed using primers designed to amplify a consensus sequence in the Bartonella intergenic transcribed sequence (ITS) region. The amplicon size of this region is species dependent, with sizes ranging from 453 bp for B. bovis to 717 bp for B. elizabethae (34). Oligonucleotides 321s (5' AGA TGA TGA TCC CAA GCC TTC TGG 3') and 983as (5' TGT TCT YAC AAC AAT GAT GAT G 3') were used as forward and reverse primers, respectively. Amplification of the ITS region was performed in a reaction mixture with a 25-µl final volume containing 16.5 µl of molecular-grade water (Epicentre), 0.5 µl of 10 mM deoxynucleoside triphosphate mixture, 2.5 µl of 10x PCR buffer, 2.5 µl of 25 mM MgCl2, and 0.7 U of Amplitaq Gold DNA polymerase. All reagents were purchased from Perkin-Elmer Applied Biosystems (Foster City, CA) unless otherwise stated. The reaction mixture was completed by adding 0.25 µl of 30 µM each forward and reverse primer (IDT DNA Technology) and 2 µl of DNA from each Bartonella species tested. PCR-negative controls consisted of 2 µl of distilled H2O (when isolates from plates were tested) or 2 µl of DNA extracted from uninoculated BAPGM (when BAPGM cultures were tested). Conventional PCR conditions were as follows: a single hot-start cycle at 95°C for 5 min, followed by 45 cycles of denaturing at 94°C for 45 seconds, annealing at 54°C for 45 seconds, and extension at 72°C for 45 seconds. Amplification was completed by an additional cycle at 72°C for 10 min, and products were analyzed by 2% agarose gel electrophoresis and detection using ethidium bromide under UV light.
Real-time PCR analysis. The Scorpion 321 fluorescent probe (5' FAM-CCG CGT TTT TCA AAG CCC ACG CGG-QUE-HEG-AGA TGA TGA TCC CAA GCC TTC TGG 3') and primer 425as (5' GGA TRA AYY RGW AAA CCT TYM YCG G 3') were used for PCR genus screening of the Bartonella ITS region. Bartonella henselae species identification was performed by real-time PCR using a Taqman fluorescent probe (Cy5-CCA CCG TGG GCT TTG AAA AAC GCT-DBHQ3) and oligonucleotides 321s (5' AGA TGA TGA TCC CAA GCC TTC TGG CG 3') and 421 as (5' GGA TRA AYY RGW AAA CCT TYM YCG G 3') as forward and reverse primers (IDT DNA Technology), respectively. Real-time reactions were performed using a SmartCycler II system (Cepheid, Sunnyvale, CA) with reaction mixtures (final volume, 25 µl) containing 14.5 µl of molecular-grade water (Epicentre), 5 µl Takara PCR Master Mix, and 2 µl of 25 mM MgCl2. All reagents were purchased from Fisher Scientific (Pittsburgh, PA) unless otherwise stated. As above, 2 µl of DNA from each sample was used for real-time PCR analysis. Reactions were completed by adding either 1 µl of 10 µM Scorpion 321 fluorescent probe and 0.25 µl of 30 µM primer 425as (for genus diagnostics) or 1 µl of 10 µM Taqman probe and 0.25 µl of 30 µM each primer, 321s and 425as (for species identification). Real-time PCR conditions were as follows: a single hot-start cycle at 95°C for 30 s, followed by 45 cycles of denaturing at 94°C for 10 s, 6 s of annealing at 58°C (for Bartonella genus diagnostics) or 54°C (for B. henselae diagnostics), and a final extension at 72°C for 10 s. Positive amplicons were detected by fluorescence reading at the appropriate wavelength.
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FIG. 1. Growth curve of B. henselae in BAPGM. Viable cell counts (reported as CFU/ml) in liquid BAPGM were determined at 24-h intervals after plating of individual culture aliquots onto commercial blood agar plates. Colony counts were performed after a 7-day incubation period on blood agar plates that were maintained at 35°C and 5% CO2 in a water-saturated atmosphere.
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FIG. 2. Growth curve of B. quintana in BAPGM. Viable cell counts (reported as CFU/ml) in liquid BAPGM were determined at 24-h intervals after plating of individual culture aliquots onto commercial blood agar plates. Colony counts were performed after a 7-day incubation period on blood agar plates that were maintained at 35°C and 5% CO2 in a water-saturated atmosphere.
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FIG. 3. Two percent agarose gel electrophoresis of an intergenic spacer region PCR amplification (primers 321s and 983as) of Bartonella cultures in BAPGM (lanes 2 to 9, at 7 days postinoculation; lanes 10 to 16, 5 days postinoculation). Lane 1, 1-kbp DNA ladder; lane 2, B. elizabethae (717 bp); lane 3, B. grahamii (658 bp); lane 4, B. quintana Fuller (564 bp); lanes 5 and 12, B. vinsonii (berkhoffii) (706 bp); lane 6, B. henselae Houston-1 (648 bp); lane 7, B. clarridgeiae (636 bp); lane 8, B. doshiae (550 bp); lanes 9 and 16, BAPGM as a negative control; lane 10, B. henselae; lane 11, B. quintana; lane 13, B. henselae and B. quintana coculture; lane 14, B. henselae and B. vinsonii (berkhoffii) coculture; lane 15, B. quintana and B. vinsonii (berkhoffii) coculture.
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Isolation of B. henselae from naturally infected cats. No growth was observed from the two blood samples or from the aqueous fluid sample after direct inoculation onto a blood agar plate and visual monitoring of the cultures for 5 weeks. Culture of the blood sample from cat A and the aqueous fluid from cat B in BAPGM for 7 days, followed by subculturing onto a blood agar plate, produced colonies that were clearly visible on the blood agar plate after 7 days. Three colonies were obtained from the cat A blood sample, and several colonies were obtained from the aqueous fluid sample (cat B). Each colony was subcultured on blood agar plates for species identification. Samples obtained directly from BAPGM after 3 and 7 days, as well as from each blood agar plate isolate, were screened by conventional PCR. For all the samples, PCR followed by gel electrophoresis resulted in a 648-bp single-band amplicon that corresponds to the ITS region amplicon of B. henselae. Further, this finding was confirmed by real-time PCR using a B. henselae-specific Taqman fluorescent probe. Although no colony formation was observed following subculture of the cat B blood sample, real-time PCR analyses using DNA extracted from whole blood and from BAPGM blood culture were both positive by use of probes specific for Bartonella genera and for B. henselae. It is interesting that B. henselae in the blood and aqueous fluid samples from cat B showed a much lower DNA copy number in the blood and in the blood-BAPGM culture by real-time PCR than in the aqueous fluid and the aqueous fluid-BAPGM culture (results not shown). Successful isolation of B. henselae from the aqueous fluid from cat B may have resulted due to the larger number of bacteria present in this sample, compared with the number of organisms present in blood.
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Several laboratories have participated in research efforts with the goal of creating an isolation medium that will enhance the growth and maintenance of Bartonella species. Despite these efforts, isolation of Bartonella species from nonimmunocompromised individuals remains a highly insensitive diagnostic method. This finding suggests that additional optimization of the biochemical constituents of a liquid medium is required in order to obtain isolates from patients. To date, no liquid- or solid-phase medium has proven to be reliable for the isolation of single or multiple Bartonella species from naturally infected animals or humans (3, 13). Although some blood-free media have shown good potential for the growth of B. henselae or B. quintana (13, 49), supplementation with blood, erythrocyte membranes, or an erythrocyte membrane component seems to be required for initial growth and to achieve the full growth-promoting effect of the culture medium (33, 46). In addition, the use of hemin as a blood or erythrocyte substitute represents a real challenge, which could compromise the use of these media when the infecting Bartonella species is not known or when polymicrobial Bartonella infection is present in the patient. Research has shown that optimal hemin concentrations differ among Bartonella species (46). Bartonella quintana required a hemin concentration of 40 µg/ml for growth, while B. henselae required approximately 250 µg/ml of hemin for ideal growth. In fact, hemin concentrations in excess of these established for optimal growth became toxic to each Bartonella species tested, resulting in decreased growth (i.e., ideal hemin concentrations for the growth of B. henselae are toxic to B. quintana) (46). It should be noted that only B. henselae (from culture and clinical samples) and B. quintana (from culture samples) have been evaluated in order to establish the potential isolation and growth support/enhancement role of blood-free media (13, 46, 49). Also, the development of optimal culture techniques and improvements in isolation media may have been hampered somewhat by the fact that only a few (primarily B. henselae and B. quintana) of the 17 Bartonella species described to date have been biochemically characterized.
In this report, we describe the development of a novel liquid isolation medium, which is based on a formulation that promotes the growth of insect cells in culture. This medium supports the isolation and growth of at least seven Bartonella species and may facilitate the isolation of two or more Bartonella species from the same patient. Coinfection with more than one Bartonella species, as indicated by serology and/or PCR, has frequently been reported in dogs and cats (19, 20, 36, 47) and has been suggested to occur in rodents (32, 50). It is our opinion that the occurrence of coinfection with multiple Bartonella species is likely underestimated in both animals and humans due to the limitations associated with the culture and isolation of the infecting agent and the limitations associated with other diagnostic methodologies currently in use (e.g., PCR and serology). It is not clear if the disappearance of the 706-bp band of B. vinsonii (berkhoffii) during coculture with B. henselae or B. quintana was a consequence of the death of this species as a result of competition, an effect of the production of a toxic metabolite(s) by B. henselae and B. quintana, or a deleterious effect of phage induction (2, 4, 13, 35). If these in vitro data are applicable to competition among Bartonella species within animals or human beings, this would suggest that one Bartonella species could substantially suppress another Bartonella species, making detection by culture or PCR very difficult. In the present study, BAPGM supported the primary isolation of B. henselae from two clinical samples (blood and aqueous fluid) in half the time generally required when a conventional isolation medium (e.g., a sheep blood agar plate or chocolate agar plate) is used. Isolates were not obtained from these two clinical samples by direct inoculation onto a blood agar plate, consistent with the limited sensitivity of the conventional isolation approach for detection of B. henselae and other Bartonella species. Recently, we have used the isolation approach described in this study to obtain Bartonella species isolates from dogs and humans with chronic illnesses.
The results of this study suggest that the use of BAPGM for the detection and isolation of Bartonella species may provide an improved or alternative method to isolate these fastidious microorganisms from patient samples. In the future, BAPGM may represent an important culture option for the clinical microbiology laboratory. In an effort to optimize the utility of this medium, we are currently evaluating the effectiveness of different amino acid combinations in BAPGM. Amino acid supplementation appears to be one of the key components required to improve and enhance Bartonella species growth (13). In addition, we are further evaluating the diagnostic utility of BAPGM for the improved isolation of Bartonella species from sick animals and humans.
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