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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, June 2007, p. 2090-2091, Vol. 45, No. 6
0095-1137/07/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JCM.02435-06
Copyright © 2007, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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DNA was extracted from the patient's brain and from centrifuged sequential CSF and serum samples obtained by lumbar puncture over a 2-month period (June to August 2003) as previously described (7). The following primer set, which was used to identify Acanthamoeba mitochondrial 16S rRNA gene DNA, gave an amplicon of 161 bp (3): Aca16Sf1010 (5'-TTATATTGACTTGTACAGGTGCT-3') and Aca16Sr1180 (5'-CATAATGATTTGACTTCTTCTCCT-3').
Positive controls consisted of DNA extracted from two strains of Acanthamoeba polyphaga: one strain isolated from the patient's brain tissue and a second isolated from a corneal biopsy sample from a patient with Acanthamoeba keratitis (CDC:V029). Water (Sigma) was used as a negative control.
A band at
161 bp for Acanthamoeba mitochondrial DNA was seen in unfixed brain tissue (Fig. 1, lane 1) and in sections of the patient's formalin-fixed brain tissue (Fig. 1, lane 3).
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FIG. 1. PCR gel showing DNA extracts from brain tissue and Acanthamoeba controls, amplified with a 161-bp primer set for Acanthamoeba spp. An arrow indicates 161 bp. Lane 1, DNA sample extracted from unfixed brain tissue of the patient; lane 2, DNA extract from A. polyphaga (strain CDC:V029); lane 3, DNA extract from A. polyphaga isolated from the patient's brain tissue; lane 4, negative control, pure water (Sigma); lane 5, molecular size marker.
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FIG. 2. PCR gel with DNA extracted from centrifuged CSF samples over a 2-month period, amplified with a 161-bp primer set for Acanthamoeba. An arrow indicates 161 bp. Lane 1, molecular size marker; lane 2, CSF sample (June 2003) showing a weak DNA band; lane 3, CSF sample from 10 days later also showing a weak DNA band, along with multiple bands, probably from leukocytes present in the sample; lane 4, CSF sample from 3 weeks later; lane 5, CSF sample from 4 weeks later (August) at the time of the patient's death; lane 6, Acanthamoeba polyphaga, positive control; lane 7, negative control, pure water (Sigma).
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20 other encephalitis patients negative for amebic encephalitis (based on immunofluorescent antibody staining of sera), showed no evidence of a band comparable to Acanthamoeba DNA (data not included). In the present case, the etiologic ameba had been isolated from unfixed brain tissue (Fig. 1, lane 3). With some exceptions, amebae are not seen in or isolated or identified from CSF (2, 4-6). Attempts at culturing amebae from the patient's CSF were not successful (1), suggesting that intact organisms were not present in the CSF samples(s) or were present in such low numbers that they were missed in sampling.
This is the first report of detection of Acanthamoeba DNA in the CSF of an acanthamoebiasis patient. The data presented in this report suggest that PCR of CSF samples may have made premortem diagnosis and treatment possible.
Published ahead of print on 4 April 2007. |
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Shigeo Yagi* Frederick L. Schuster California Department of Health Services Viral and Rickettsial Disease Laboratory Richmond, CA 94804
Karen Bloch
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| * Phone: (510) 307-8619, Fax: (510) 307-8599, E-mail: syagi{at}dhs.ca.gov |
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