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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, February 2007, p. 285-289, Vol. 45, No. 2
0095-1137/07/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JCM.01335-06
Copyright © 2007, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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Utpal Mondal,2
Shantanu Roy,2,
Rashidul Haque,2
William A. Petri Jr.,3 and
C. Graham Clark1*
Department of Infectious and Tropical Diseases, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, London, Great Britain,1 International Centre for Diarrhoeal Disease Research, Dhaka, Bangladesh,2 Division of Infectious Diseases and International Health, Department of Internal Medicine, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Virginia3
Received 29 June 2006/ Returned for modification 21 August 2006/ Accepted 8 November 2006
| ABSTRACT |
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| INTRODUCTION |
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In order to investigate whether there is any link between the parasite and the outcome of infection, a reliable method for genotyping the organism is required. A number of methods for detecting diversity in E. histolytica have been described over the years (4), but we recently described a PCR-based approach that is highly sensitive and discriminatory (1). The six targets for amplification in this method were selected from among the 40-plus short tandem repeat (STR)-containing loci linked to tRNA genes in E. histolytica (5). In the present study we applied this genotyping system to a panel of samples isolated from Bangladeshi individuals who either were asymptomatic or had intestinal or extraintestinal disease. Statistical analyses of the results suggest that the parasite genome plays a role in determining the outcome of infection with E. histolytica.
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Entamoeba histolytica infection is defined by a positive test result for amebic antigen in stool. A "new episode" of E. histolytica infection during the period of observation is defined as a positive E. histolytica stool antigen and/or culture result preceded by two or more monthly surveillance stool samples with negative results. This definition is based on that used in earlier studies with this cohort that demonstrated a requirement for two negative monthly stool samples to obtain the highest separation between new and relapsed infections, as judged by DNA fingerprinting of the parasite by serine-rich E. histolytica protein (SREHP) gene polymorphism (11).
E. histolytica-associated diarrhea is defined as three or more unformed stools in a 24-h period accompanying a new episode of E. histolytica infection. This definition has previously been validated with this cohort by demonstrating that diarrhea was approximately five times more common in the setting of a new infection (age-adjusted odds ratio for the association of new E. histolytica infection with diarrhea, 4.7; 95% confidence interval, 2.9 to 7.6) (13). Amebic dysentery is defined as a diarrheal stool sample containing occult or gross blood that was positive for E. histolytica antigen (13). Coinfection with Shigella or Campylobacter in children with E. histolytica-associated diarrhea was observed in only 9% (6/69) of the episodes for which a complete microbiologic workup was performed (12). In contrast, a complete workup for enteropathogens in 210 episodes of non-E. histolytica-associated diarrhea identified an etiologic agent in 59% of cases (13). This indicates that the symptoms in patients with E. histolytica-associated diarrhea, as defined above, are strongly linked to the presence of the ameba.
Amebic liver abscess (ALA) samples were from patients admitted to various clinics and hospitals in Dhaka. Liver abscesses are routinely aspirated and the aspirated pus is sent to ICDDR,B for diagnostic purposes. The use of human subjects was approved by the Ethical Review Committee of the ICDDR,B and the Human Investigation Committee of the University of Virginia. Informed consent was obtained from the parents of the children.
The organisms in a total of 155 E. histolytica-positive samples, as determined by amebic stool antigen detection (E. histolytica II kit; TechLab, Inc., Blacksburg, VA) and/or small-subunit rRNA gene amplification (14), were typed in the present study.
In some cases multiple samples were available from the same child. If the organisms in the follow-up samples (i.e., the subsequent monthly sample or a diarrheal sample) showed no change in genotype, only one sample was included in the statistical analysis. If organisms of the same genotype were identified in both asymptomatic and diarrheal samples from the same child, the result was included in the diarrhea/dysentery group only.
For the diarrhea/dysentery group, only samples that met the stringent definitions (described above) of E. histolytica-associated diarrhea or amebic dysentery were included. Four samples that met the definitions but that had Campylobacter and/or Shigella coinfection were excluded, as the disease origin could not be definitively assigned to the ameba.
The final number of samples included in the statistical analysis was 111: 38 in the asymptomatic group, 30 in the diarrhea/dysentery group, and 43 in the liver abscess group.
Isolation of DNA and PCR amplification. DNA from the culture, stool, or ALA pus lysates was purified by the cetyltrimethylammonium bromide extraction method or with a QIAquick DNA stool minikit (QIAGEN, Ltd., United Kingdom), as described previously (1). It has previously been shown that the establishment of amebae in culture has no effect on the genotype (19). PCR amplification was performed with E. histolytica-specific primer pairs targeting the tRNA-linked polymorphic STR loci, with BioTaq polymerase (Bioline Ltd., United Kingdom), and under the conditions already described (1). In a few cases a nested PCR was performed first with tRNA-specific primers and then with the E. histolytica-specific pair of primers to improve detection.
Genotype assignment. PCR products were separated in 1.5% agarose gels as described previously (1). The resolving power of these gels is sufficient to detect differences in product sizes as small as 8 bp (verified by product sequencing [unpublished data]). Each unique amplification product size was assigned an "STR type" number at each locus (see Table S1 in the supplemental material). In cases in which the assignment was uncertain, the products were reanalyzed in lanes adjacent to reference samples. By using a combination of the assigned numbers for all six loci, each isolate was then assigned an overall genotype number.
Data analysis. Statistical analysis of the genotype distribution among the three sample groups was performed by using the Arlequin software package (http://anthro.unige.ch/arlequin/ [8]). Both individual locus data and overall genotype data were analyzed. The total number of predicted genotypes was calculated by using the Chao estimator (7).
| RESULTS |
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Genotype distribution among sample groups. In addition to the overall population comparison, the PCR patterns at two of the six loci (the D-A and N-K2 loci) showed a strong statistically significant difference in their distributions among the two sample groups from Mirpur (Table 1). In particular, two PCR patterns in locus D-A stand out: STR type 2, found in 16 of 38 samples from asymptomatic individuals but only 4 of 30 samples from patients with diarrhea/dysentery, and STR type 3, found in 25 of 30 samples from patients with diarrhea/dysentery but only 19 of 38 samples from asymptomatic individuals. Similarly, two PCR patterns in locus N-K2 appear to have contributed the most to this result: STR type 8, found in 19 of 30 samples from patients with diarrhea/dysentery but only 3 of 38 samples from asymptomatic individuals, and STR type 9, found in 21 of 38 samples from asymptomatic individuals but only 5 of 30 samples from patients with diarrhea/dysentery.
When the liver abscess samples were included, we found that the overall difference in genotypes between each of the two population pairs was highly significant (Table 1). Between the asymptomatic and the liver abscess sample groups, the loci showing the greatest difference in distribution were A-L (STR types 1 and 2), N-K2 (STR types 8 and 9), and S-Q (STR types 3 and 4), while between the diarrhea/dysentery and liver abscess groups, the greatest differences were again in loci A-L (STR types 2 and 3) and S-Q (STR types 3 and 4), with the addition of locus D-A (STR types 2 and 3). Variations at the R-R and S-D loci never showed significant differentiation between the sample groups.
Association between individual genotypes and outcome of infection. The total number of genotypes was very high; therefore, the number of samples represented by any one genotype was low. We tested only the most common genotype for an association with the outcome of infection (see Table S2B in the supplemental material). Genotype 66 was significantly more common in samples from the diarrhea/dysentery group (P = 0.0005). Nevertheless, genotype 66 was found in only 7 of the 30 samples from the diarrhea/dysentery group (23.3%).
Predicted total number of genotypes. The Chao estimator was used to predict the total number of genotypes in Bangladesh (7). Among the samples from the asymptomatic and diarrhea/dysentery groups, the total predicted number of genotypes in Mirpur children alone is 113, more than twice the number detected in this study. With the liver abscess samples added, the predicted number of genotypes across Bangladesh is 357. This is probably an underestimate, since sampling was not uniform or comprehensive.
E. histolytica follow-up samples. Follow-up samples were available from 23 children, and we investigated the stabilities of the genotype patterns of the organisms from these infections. A maximum of seven follow-up samples were available from one child over a period of 11 months, and the same genotype was detected in all except one of the samples (sample 3402-MS33), which seemed to show a mixture of two genotypes (Fig. 1A). However the "new" genotype was not found in the subsequent monthly follow-up sample (sample 3402-MS34), suggesting that it was a transient infection. Transient infections have been reported previously (18). Six and five follow-up samples were available from one child each. Both of these children carried an infection with the same genotype throughout the follow-up period. Two and three follow-up samples were available from 13 and 7 children, respectively. The genotypes changed in 7 children, while in 13 children all the follow-up samples showed the same genotypes at all loci. On average, three of the six loci changed when a follow-up genotype was different, indicating that loss and reinfection are easily detectable. In four cases, an infection with the same genotype persisted for over 10 months; in each case the genotype was different, suggesting that the ability to produce a long-term infection is not restricted to a particular genotype.
| DISCUSSION |
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(i) All our asymptomatic and diarrhea/dysentery samples were from preschool children from Mirpur, and we do not know whether their genotypes are representative of those from all age groups and of the strain diversity across Bangladesh. All ALA samples were from adults in other areas of Dhaka. No adult or geographically matched asymptomatic or diarrhea/dysentery control groups were available, and so comparisons between the Mirpur and ALA samples must be interpreted with caution.
(ii) The genotypes were assigned on the basis of the estimated PCR product sizes in gels, and as a result some assignments could be incorrect. Nevertheless, sequencing of approximately half of the products at two loci (unpublished data) suggests that an incorrect STR type assignment is rare. The individual short tandem repeat units in the various loci are generally 8 or 9 bp in length, which means that a difference of one repeat more or less is usually clearly detectable under our gel conditions.
(iii) Our genotyping is based on PCR product size differences, but products of the same size do not necessarily have the same sequence. Sequencing has confirmed that this does occur. However, unless both sequence types show the same unequal distribution among sample populations, the combination of two different sequences in the same STR type is likely to reduce rather than increase any population differentiation signal that exists.
Using the six tRNA-linked STR loci, we detected 85 genotypes in 111 unrelated samples, a level of diversity which is comparable to that described in previous reports. Ayeh-Kumi et al. (2) also studied clinical samples from Bangladesh but used a nested PCR of the SREHP gene coupled with restriction digestion. They found 25 genotypes among 42 intestinal isolates and 9 genotypes among the isolates from 12 ALA samples. Eight of their nine genotypes among the liver abscess samples were unique to the ALA samples investigated. We also found that most of our ALA genotypes were unique and not detected among the intestinal strains. Clark and Diamond (6) observed 16 different genotypes among 18 isolates of E. histolytica from diverse geographical locations using the combined results of restriction digestion of SREHP and amplification of the SSG locus. Haghighi et al. (9) used sequencing of four loci (two tRNA-linked STR loci, chitinase, and SREHP) to investigate 79 isolates of E. histolytica, mostly from Japan and Thailand, but failed to find an association between the parasite genotype and the outcome of infection. The high level of diversity seen suggests that the rapid generation of new variants is occurring. If this is the case, then it may be that we have detected population differentiation only because our samples came from a geographically restricted population (Mirpur) and all of our samples were collected over a relatively short period of time (2 years).
The high degree of polymorphism detected in E. histolytica could have been problematic, but we did find a statistically significant difference in genotype representation among the three sample populations, suggesting that the parasite genome does influence the outcome of infection. Other approaches will be needed to identify the genes responsible for this result, as it is highly unlikely that the tRNA-linked STR loci are directly responsible in any way. It is also important to know whether these observations made in Bangladesh can be replicated in other parts of the world. To investigate this, extensive sample collections from additional areas of endemicity are needed.
Explaining the link between parasite genotype and infection outcome presents us with some theoretical problems. Existing evidence points to E. histolytica being a clonal organism; therefore, meiotic recombination and reassortment of genes should not be contributing to genotype differences. If this is true, a novel mechanism for generating genetic variation may exist. This could involve a recurring genome instability that leads to the repeated generation of the same genotypes through intragenomic reorganization and is reflected in turn in the tRNA-linked STR polymorphisms detected by our method. Only future genome-wide analyses of chromosome organization can address this possibility.
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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The genotyping was supported by grant 067314 from the Wellcome Trust, awarded to C. G. Clark. The Mirpur study is conducted at the ICDDR,B Centre for Health and Population Research with the support of a grant (grant AI-43596) from the National Institutes of Health through the University of Virginia. I. K. M. Ali was a doctoral student funded by the Commonwealth Scholarship Commission of Great Britain. R. Haque is a Howard Hughes Medical Institute International Research Scholar.
We thank the parents and children of Mirpur for their participation and Jian-Fen Shu for guidance on the statistical analysis.
| FOOTNOTES |
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Published ahead of print on 22 November 2006. ![]()
Supplemental material for this article may be found at http://jcm.asm.org. ![]()
Present address: Department of Microbiology, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, CA 94305-5107. ![]()
Present address: Department of Medicine, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL 60637. ![]()
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