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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, October 2007, p. 3468-3469, Vol. 45, No. 10
0095-1137/07/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JCM.00607-07
Copyright © 2007, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
| CASE REPORT |

Department of Infectious Diseases, Monash Medical Centre, 246 Clayton Road, Clayton, Victoria 3168, Australia,1 Department of Medicine, Monash University, Clayton, Victoria 3168, Australia2
Received 19 March 2007/ Returned for modification 26 June 2007/ Accepted 24 July 2007
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The Gram stain of the initial swab from the incision and drainage revealed polymorphonuclear leukocytes, but no organisms were seen. Pure growth of slightly irregular gram-positive bacilli was noted on horse blood agar and chocolate agar after 24 h at 35°C in aerobic conditions and also when enriched with CO2. The colonies were fine and circular without hemolysis. Standard protocols for manual biochemical tests were followed in our laboratory and the reference laboratory. The catalase and nitrate reduction tests were positive. Hydrolyses of urea and esculin were also positive. Carbohydrate fermentation reactions occurred with glucose, maltose, sucrose, and pyrazinamidase, but not with mannitol and xylose. The CAMP test was negative. The penicillin MIC was 1.0 µg/ml, as determined by Etest (AB Biodisk, Solna, Sweden) (7). Using a BBL crystal Gram-positive identification system (Becton Dickinson and Company, MD) and API Coryne v3.0 (bioMerieux, Marcy-l'Etoile, France), the microorganism was identified as Corynebacterium kutscheri with 99.9% confidence on both systems (biotypes 2760041527 and 7051325, respectively).
DNA was extracted using a Roche High Pure PCR template preparation kit with lysozyme (F. Hoffmann-La Roche, Basel, Switzerland). Sequence analysis was performed with 462 nucleotides at the 5' end of the 16S rRNA gene, and a GenBank BLAST search (National Center for Biotechnology, Bethesda, MD) was carried out. The patient's isolate had 100% sequence homology with the Corynebacterium kutscheri rRNA nucleotide sequence with GenBank accession number X82063 (data not shown) (12).
C. kutscheri was first isolated in mice in 1894 (9). It has since been described as a commensal bacterium in mice, rats, and voles and has been identified in the oral cavity, esophagus, colon, rectum, and submaxillary lymph nodes of these rodents (1, 9). It was first called pseudotuberculosis, as clinical disease with the organism resembled mouse tuberculosis, with pulmonary abscesses and caseating necrosis. Typically, C. kutscheri causes latent infection in healthy mice and rats but can cause severe illness when an animal is immunocompromised or nutritionally deficient (1, 3a, 9, 10). Illness is characterized by bacteremia with septic emboli and end-organ disease in the kidneys and livers of mice and the lungs of rats (3a, 9, 10).
Phylogenetically, C. kutscheri closely resembles other diphtheroids of clinical significance in humans (11), including Corynebacterium diphtheriae, Corynebacterium pseudotuberculosis (6), and Corynebacterium ulcerans (3). It has not been reported as a commensal in humans or an environmental pathogen. Human infection has been limited to two case reports, although there were no associations with rodent bites and the data supplied did not definitively establish an identification of the pathogen as C. kutscheri, as noted in the comprehensive review by Funke et al. (5). In the possible case of chorioamnionitis and funisitis described in Fitter et al. (4), the isolate did not reduce nitrate and only sucrose and urease reactions were listed. In the other case of septic arthritis, described in Messina et al. (8), there was no specific information about which carbohydrates were fermented.
We believe that this report is the first definite case of Corynebacterium kutscheri causing infection in humans. Notably, in this case a soft tissue infection occurred in the context of a recent rat bite. C. kutscheri was identified using commercially available identification systems, and the identification was confirmed by 16S rRNA gene sequencing. Rat bite fever caused by Streptobacillus moniliformis or Spirillum minus (2) is well described, and C. kutscheri should be considered as another causative microorganism in the spectrum of rat bite-associated bacterial disease in humans.
The authors report no conflicts of interest.
Published ahead of print on 1 August 2007. ![]()
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