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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, September 1998, p. 2793-2794, Vol. 36, No. 9
0095-1137/98/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1998, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Mycobacterium microti: More Widespread than
Previously Thought
 |
LETTER |
Mycobacterium microti typically causes disease in
voles, wood mice, and shrews (6). Only rarely has this
bacterium been isolated from other animals, among which are a llama,
cats, pigs, a rock hyrax, and a ferret (2, 4, 5). Recently,
M. microti isolates from different sources were
characterized by using novel genetic markers (5), and this
study for the first time disclosed four cases of M. microti infections in humans in The Netherlands. Here we describe
the finding of additional M. microti infections in
animals and a human in the United Kingdom (UK) that were identified by
spoligotyping (3).
In the framework of a European Union project on the development of
novel standardized methodology for the identification of and
nomenclature for Mycobacterium bovis, spoligotype patterns of Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex strains from the
Central Veterinary Laboratory (CVL), UK, were compared to the
ones in an international database of spoligotype patterns at the
National Institute of Public Health and the Environment (RIVM) in The
Netherlands. This database also contains the previously described
spoligotype patterns of M. microti strains
(5). Surprisingly, the patterns of 11 M. tuberculosis complex isolates from the CVL database were identical or highly similar to the spoligotypes of M. microti isolates (Table 1). The
majority of these were from cats from the south of England (Kent and
Sussex) and were sent to the CVL by the Public Health
Laboratory Service, Cardiff, Wales, for further investigation on the
basis that they had been found to have characteristics between those of
M. bovis and M. tuberculosis.
Analysis of spoligotyping patterns revealed that one cat isolate had a
spoligotype identical to that of the characteristic vole type, as
established in the previous study with vole isolates from the UK
(5) (Table 1). In addition, three strains exhibited a novel
spoligotype that resembled the characteristic vole pattern. These
strains hybridized with one additional spacer, spacer 4. These
strains were obtained from a cat, a cow, and a badger. The cow and the
badger originated from the Gloucestershire and Cornwall regions of
England, respectively.
Furthermore, the spoligotypes of seven isolates identified in the CVL
database originating from six cats and a human were almost identical to
the spoligotype of a previously described M. microti
isolate from a llama (5) (Table 1). Six of these strains
were from a study including 19 isolates from cats previously described
as an undefined subgroup of the M. tuberculosis complex by Gunn-Moore et al. (1). In that study the authors
occasionally observed acid-fast bacilli with hooked or looped forms,
which are characteristic of M. microti (5).
Because the sources of infection may have been prey related due to the
avid hunting behavior of the respective cats, the authors speculated
that this type of strain originated from wild prey animals, such as
small rodents.
Only three spoligotypes were found among the 12 previously described
M. microti strains (5), indicating that
these spoligotypes are characteristic of M. microti.
The finding of isolates from animals and a human with identical or
nearly identical spoligotypes within the CVL database suggests that
these isolates represent M. microti.
Due to the fastidious nature of M. microti and the
difficulties in characterizing this bacterial species by traditional
methods (4), the prevalence, geographical distribution, and
host range of this organism may have been underestimated. Our study
suggests that M. microti is more widespread among
different hosts than previously thought.
 |
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| | | | |
Kristin Kremer
Dick van Soolingen
Diagnostic
Laboratory of Infectious Diseases and Perinatal
Screening
|
| | | | |
Jan van Embden
Research Laboratory
for Infectious Diseases National Institute of Public Health and
the Environment 3720 BA Bilthoven, The Netherlands
|
| | | | |
Stephen Hughes
Jacqueline Inwald
Glyn Hewinson
TB Research Group Bacteriology Department, Central
Veterinary Laboratory Veterinary Laboratories Agency New
Haw, Addlestone, Surrey, KT15 3NB, United Kingdom
|
Journal of Clinical Microbiology, September 1998, p. 2793-2794, Vol. 36, No. 9
0095-1137/98/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1998, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
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