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The Enterobacteriaceae Basic Properties Dr. John R. Warren Department of Pathology Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine June 2007 Characteristics of the Enterobacteriaceae • Gram-negative rods • Glucose is fermented with strong acid formation and often gas • Cytochrome oxidase activity is negative • Nitrate is reduced to nitrite Gram’s Stain for Bacterial Morphology • Crystal violet binds to cell wall peptidoglycan with Gram’s iodine as a mordant • Safranin or basic fuchsin counterstains bacterial cells decolorized by alcoholacetone Gram’s Stain for Bacterial Morphology • Thick cell-wall peptidoglycan layer of grampositive bacteria strongly binds crystal violet and resists decolorization by alcoholacetone • Thin cell-wall peptidoglycan layer of gramnegative bacteria located beneath a thick lipid-rich outer membrane weakly binds crystal violet that is readily removed by alcohol-acetone decolorization Gram’s Stain Procedure • • • • • • • • • Flood surface of smear with crystal violet solution After 1 min thoroughly rinse with cold tap water Flood smear with Gram’s iodine for 1 min Rinse smear with acetone-alcohol decolorizer until no more crystal violet in rinse effluent Rinse with cold tap water Flood smear with safranin (regular Gram’s stain) or basic fuchsin (enhanced Gram’s stain) Rinse with cold tap water Dry smear in slide rack Microscopically examine stained smear using oilimmersion light microscopy Glucose Fermentation • • • • • • • Oxidation-reduction of glucose in the absence of molecular oxygen (anaerobic glycolysis) Energy from hydrolysis of chemical bonds in anaerobic glycolysis captured as high energy phosphate bonds of adenosine triphosphate (ATP) NAD is reduced to NADH2 by accepting electrons during glycolytic conversion of glucose to pyruvate NADH2 in turn reduces pyruvate with oxidation of NADH2 to NAD which supports continued anaerobic glycolysis, and generation from pyruvate of alcohols, carboxylic acids, and CO2 gas End products of glucose fermentation: organic acids and CO2 gas Fermentation detected by acidification of glucose-containing broth (color change in broth or agar medium containing pH indicators), and (for aerogenic species) production of gas (fractures in agar, gas bubbles in inverted Durham tube) pH indicators: phenol red (yellow at acid pH), methyl red (red at acid pH), neutral red (red at acid pH), bromcresol purple (yellow at acid pH) Spot Cytochrome Oxidase Test • The spot cytochrome oxidase test is the first test performed with gramnegative bacteria recovered in culture • The optimal plate medium for a spot cytochrome oxidase test is a trypticase soy agar (TSA) containing 5% sheep blood • Bacterial colonies should be 18 to 24 hr old Spot Cytochrome Oxidase Test • In a positive test, bacterial cytochrome oxidase oxidizes the colorless reduced substrate tetramethyl-p-phenylenediamine dihydrochloride (TPDD) forming a dark purple oxidized indophenol product • Streak a small portion of bacterial colony to filter paper soaked with a 1% solution of TPDD • If the streak mark turns purple in 10 sec or less, the spot oxidase test is interpreted as positive Nitrate Reduction • Enterobacteriaceae extract oxygen from nitrate (NO3) producing nitrite (NO2) • NO2 detected by reaction with αnaphthylamine and sulfanilic acid producing a red colored complex • Absence of red color indicates either no reduction of NO3 or reduction to products other than NO2 (denitrification) • Confirmation of true negative test: addition of zinc ions which reduce NO3 to NO2 producing a red color in the presence of αnaphthylamine and sulfanilic acid Enterobacteriaceae: Genetic Properties • Chromosomal DNA has 39-59% guanine-plus-cytosine (G+C) content • Escherichia coli is the type genus and species of the Enterobacteriaceae • Species of Enterobacteriaceae more closely related by evolutionary distance to Escherichia coli than to organisms of other families (Pseudomonadaceae, Aeromonadaceae) Enterobacteriaceae: Major Genera • • • • • • • • • • • • Escherichia Shigella Salmonella Edwardsiella Citrobacter Yersinia Klebsiella Enterobacter Serratia Proteus Morganella Providencia Enterobacteriaceae: Microbiological Properties • Gram-negative and rod shaped (bacilli) • Ferment rather than oxidize D-glucose with acid and (often) gas production • Reduce nitrate to nitrite • Grow readily on 5% sheep blood or chocolate agar in carbon dioxide or ambient air • Grow anaerobically (facultative anaerobes) Enterobacteriaceae: Microbiological Properties • Catalase positive and cytochrome oxidase negative • Grow readily on MacConkey (MAC) and eosin methylene blue (EMB) agars • Grow readily at 35oC except Yersinia (25o30oC) • Motile by peritrichous flagella except Shigella and Klebsiella which are non-motile • Do not form spores Enterobacteriaceae: Natural Habitats • Environmental sites (soil, water, and plants) • Intestines of humans and animals Enterobacteriaceae: Modes of Infection • Contaminated food and water (Salmonella spp., Shigella spp., Yersinia enterocolitica, Escherichia coli O157:H7) • Endogenous (urinary tract infection, primary bacterial peritonitis, abdominal abscess) • Abnormal host colonization (nosocomial pneumonia) • Transfer between debilitated patients • Insect (flea) vector (unique for Yersinia pestis) Enterobacteriaceae: Types of Infectious Disease • Intestinal (diarrheal) infection • Extraintestinal infection Urinary tract (primarily cystitis) Respiratory (nosocomial pneumonia) Wound (surgical wound infection) Bloodstream (gram-negative bacteremia) Central nervous system (neonatal meningitis) Enterobacteriaceae: Urinary Tract Infection, Pneumonia • Urinary tract infection: Escherichia coli, Klebsiella pneumoniae, Enterobacter spp., and Proteus mirabilis • Pneumonia: Enterobacter spp., Klebsiella pneumoniae, Escherichia coli, and Proteus mirabilis Enterobacteriaceae: Wound Infection, Bacteremia • Wound Infection: Escherichia coli, Enterobacter spp., Klebsiella pneumoniae, and Proteus mirabilis • Bacteremia: Escherichia coli, Enterobacter spp., Klebsiella pneumoniae, and Proteus mirabilis Enterobacteriaceae: Nosocomial Infections in the United States 1986-1989 and 1990-19961 • • • • • • Escherichia coli 27,871 (13.7%) Enterobacter spp. 12,757 (6.2%) Klebsiella pneumoniae 11,015 (5.4%) Proteus mirabilis 4,662 (2.3%) Serratia marcescens 3,010 (1.5%) Citrobacter spp. 2,912 (1.4%) 1Enteric Reference Laboratory, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Enterobacteriaceae: Intestinal Infection • • • • • • Shigella sonnei (serogroup D) Salmonella serotype Enteritidis Salmonella serotype Typhimurium Shigella flexneri (serogroup B) Escherichia coli O157:H7 Yersinia enterocolitica Triple Sugar Iron (TSI) Agar • • • • Yeast extract 0.3% (% = grams/100 mL) Beef extract 0.3% Peptone 1.5% Proteose peptone 0.5% Total Protein = 2.6% • Lactose 1.0% • Sucrose1 1.0% • Glucose 0.1% Carbohydrate = 2.1% 1Absent in Kligler Iron Agar Triple Sugar Iron (TSI) Agar • • • • • • Ferrous sulfate Sodium thiosulfate Sodium chloride Agar (1.2%) Phenol red pH = 7.4 TSI Reactions of the Enterobacteriaceae • Yellow deep, purple slant: acid deep due to glucose fermentation , no lactose or sucrose fermentation with alkaline slant due to production of amine’s from protein • Black deep, purple slant: acid deep due to glucose fermentation with H2S production, no lactose or sucrose fermentation • Yellow deep and slant: acid deep and slant due to glucose as well as lactose and/or sucrose fermentation • Black deep and yellow or black slant: acid deep and slant with glucose and lactose and/or sucrose fermentation with H2S production • Fracturing or lifting of agar from base of culture tube: CO2 production TSI Reactions of the Enterobacteriaceae • • • • • • • A/A + g = acid/acid plus gas (CO2) A/A = acid/acid A/A + g, H2S = acid/acid plus gas, H2S Alk/A = alkaline/acid Alk/A + g = alkaline/acid plus gas Alk/A + g, H2S = alkaline/acid plus gas, H2S Alk/A + g, H2S (w) = alkaline/acid plus gas, H2S (weak) A/A + g • • • • • • Escherichia coli Klebsiella pneumoniae Klebsiella oxytoca Enterobacter aerogenes Enterobacter cloacae Serratia marcescens1, 2 1Non-lactose, 255% +g sucrose fermenter A/A • Serratia marcescens1, 2 • Yersinia enterocolitica2 145% of strains 2Non-lactose, sucrose fermenter A/A + g, H2S • Citrobacter freundii • Proteus vulgaris1 1Non-lactose, sucrose fermenter Alk/A • Shigella • Providencia Alk/A + g • Salmonella serotype Paratyphi A Alk/A + g, H2S • Salmonella (most serotypes) • Proteus mirabilis • Edwardsiella tarda Alk/A + g, H2S (w) • Salmonella serotype Typhi MacConkey (MAC) Agar • • • • • • • • • Peptone Polypeptone Lactose1 Bile salts2 Crystal violet2 Neutral red3 Sodium chloride Agar pH=7.1 1Differential 1.7% 0.3% 1.0% 0.15% 0.5% 1.35% medium for lactose fermentation 2Inhibit gram positives and fastidious gram-negatives; MAC agar selective for gram-negatives 3Red color at pH < 6.8 Eosin Methylene Blue (EMB) Agar (Levine) • • • • • • Peptone 1.0% Lactose1 0.5% Eosin y2 Methylene blue2 Agar pH = 7.2 1Modified 2Inhibit formula also contains sucrose (0.5%) gram-positives and fastidious gram-negatives; selective for gram-negatives. Eosin y and methylene blue form a precipitate at acid pH; differential for lactose fermentation Bacterial Utilization of Lactose • Presence of β-galactoside permease: Transport of β-galactoside (lactose) across the bacterial cell wall • Presence of β-galactosidase: Hydrolysis of β-galactoside bond (lactoseglucose + galactose) • ONPG: Orthonitrophenyl-β-D-galactopyranoside Differential Reactions of the Enterobacteriaceae by TSI, ONPG, and MAC • Escherichia coli (A/A, ONPG+) • Klebsiella1 (A/A, ONPG+) • Enterobacter (A/A, ONPG+) • Citrobacter2 (A/A or Alk/A, ONPG+) • Serratia (A/A, ONPG+) Red colonies, pitted Red colonies, mucoid Red colonies Red or colorless colonies Colorless colonies pneumoniae, indole –, K. oxytoca, indole + 2C. freundii, indole – and H S +, C. koseri, indole + and H2S – 2 1K. Differential Reactions of the Enterobacteriaceae by TSI, ONPG, and MAC • • • • • Shigella Colorless Colonies (Alk/A; ONPG – A, B, and C1; ONPG + D1) Salmonella Colorless Colonies (Alk/A + H2S; ONPG –) Proteus Colorless Colonies (Alk/A + H2S2; ONPG –) Edwardsiella tarda Colorless Colonies (Alk/A + H2S; ONPG–) Yersinia Colorless Colonies (A/A, ONPG +) A, B, and C, ornithine –; Shigella D, ornithine + 2Proteus mirabilis. P. vulgaris sucrose + with A/A + H2S on TSI 1Shigella Differential Reactions of the Enterobacteriaceae by EMB • Escherichia coli • Klebsiella • • • • • • • Enterobacter Citrobacter Serratia Shigella Salmonella Proteus Yersinia Colonies with metallic green sheen Colonies with precipitate (ppt) and mucoid appearance Colonies with ppt Colonies with/without ppt Colonies without ppt Colonies without ppt Colonies without ppt Colonies without ppt Colonies without ppt ONPG Reaction and Lactose Fermentation (Lac) ONPG Escherichia coli + Shigella sonnei + Citrobacter + Yersinia enterocolitica + Klebsiella + Serratia marcescens + Lac + – +/– – + – Xylose Lysine Deoxycholate (XLD) Agar: Composition • • • • • • • • • • • • Xylose Lysine Lactose Sucrose Sodium chloride Yeast extract Sodium deoxycholate Sodium thiosulfate Ferric ammonium citrate Agar Phenol red pH = 7.4 0.35% 0.5% 0.75% 0.75% 0.5% 0.3% 0.25% 1.35% XLD Agar: Growth of Salmonella • Salmonella selective due to bile salt. • Xylose fermentation (except Salmonella serotype Paratyphi A) acidifies agar activating lysine decarboxylase. With xylose depletion fermentation ceases, and colonies of Salmonella (except S. Paratyphi A) alkalinize the agar due to amines from lysine decarboxylation. • Xylose fermentation provides H+ for H2S production (except S. Paratyphi A). XLD Agar: Appearance of Salmonella • Ferric ammonium citrate present in XLD agar reacts with H2S gas and forms black precipitates within colonies of Salmonella. • Agar becomes red-purple due to alkaline pH produced by amines. • Back colonies growing on red-purple agar-presumptive for Salmonella. XLD Agar: Growth of Escherichia coli and Klebsiella pneumoniae Escherichia coli and Klebsiella pneumoniae are lysine-positive coliforms that are also lactose and sucrose fermenters. The high lactose and sucrose concentrations result in strong acid production, which quenches amines produced by lysine decarboxylation. Colonies and agar appear bright yellow. Neither Escherichia coli nor Klebsiella pneumoniae produce H2S. XLD Agar: Growth of Shigella and Proteus • Shigella species do not ferment xylose, lactose, and sucrose, do not decarboxylate lysine, and do not produce H2S. Colonies appear colorless. • Proteus mirabilis ferments xylose, and thereby provides H+ for H2S production. Colonies appear black on an agar unchanged in color (Proteus deaminates rather than decarboxylates amino acids). Proteus vulgaris ferments sucrose, and colonies appear black on a yellow agar. Hektoen Enteric (HE) Agar: Composition • • • • • • • • • • • • Peptone Yeast extract Bile salts Lactose Sucrose Salicin Sodium chloride Ferric ammonium citrate Acid fuchsin Thymol blue Agar pH = 7.6 1.2% 0.3% 0.9% 1.2% 1.2% 0.2% 0.5% 1.4% HE Agar: Growth of Enteric Pathogens and Commensals • High bile salt concentration inhibits growth of grampositive and gram-negative intestinal commensals, and thereby selects for pathogenic Salmonella (bileresistant growth) present in fecal specimens. • Salmonella species as non-lactose and non-sucrose fermenters that produce H2S form colorless colonies with black centers. • Shigella species (non-lactose and non-sucrose fermenters, no H2S production) form colorless colonies. • Lactose and sucrose fermenters (E. coli, K. pneumoniae) form orange to yellow colonies due to acid production. Salmonella-Shigella Agar • • • • • • • • • • • Beef extract Peptone Bile salts Sodium citrate Brilliant green dye Lactose Sodium thiosulfate Ferric citrate Neutral red Agar pH = 7.4 0.5% 0.5% 0.85% 0.85% Trace 1.0% 0.85% 0.1% 1.4% Salmonella-Shigella (SS) Agar • Bile salts, citrates, and brilliant green dye inhibit gram-positives and most gram-negative coliforms • Lactose the sole carbohydrate • Sodium thiosulfate a source of sulfur for H2S production • Salmonella forms transparent colonies with black centers • Shigella forms transparent colonies without blackening • Lactose fermentative Enterobacteriaceae produce pink to red colonies with bile precipitate for strong lactose fermenters Use of Selective-Differential Agars for Recovery of the Enterobacteriaceae from Different Types of Specimens • • • • • Feces1: MAC or EMB + XLD &/or SS or HE2 Sputum and Urine1: MAC or EMB Wound3:MAC or EMB Peritoneal and pleural fluid4: MAC or EMB Subculture of blood positive for gram-negative’s in broth culture4: MAC or EMB • CSF, pericardial fluid, synovial fluid, bone marrow5: Not required 1Heavy population of commensal bacteria 2Utilized with enrichment broth containing selenite or mannitol to differentially inhibit enteric commensals 3Commensal bacteria (skin) and frequent polymicrobial etiology 4Possible polymicrobial etiology (normally sterile fluids) 5Normally sterile, unimicrobial etiology predominant Selectivity of Differential Agars for Salmonella1 and Shigella2 • HE or SS agar (absence of lactose fermentation1,2, H2S production1) • XLD agar (absence of lactose fermentation1,2, H2S production1, lysine decarboxylation1) • MAC or EMB agar (absence of lactose fermentation1,2) • TSI agar (glucose fermentation1,2, absence of lactose fermentation1,2, H2S production1) Descending Order of Selectivity for Salmonella and Shigella Recommended Reading Winn, W., Jr., Allen, S., Janda, W., Koneman, E., Procop, G., Schrenckenberger, P., Woods, G. Koneman’s Color Atlas and Textbook of Diagnostic Microbiology, Sixth Edition, Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, 2006: • Chapter 5. Medical Bacteriology: Taxonomy, Morphology, Physiology, and Virulence. • Chapter 6. The Enterobacteriaceae. Recommended Reading Murray, P., Baron, E., Jorgensen, J., Landry, M., Pfaller, M. Manual of Clinical Microbiology, 9th Edition, ASM Press, 2007: • Farmer, J.J., III, Boatwright, K.D., and Janda J.M. Chapter 42. Enterobacteriaceae: Introduction and Identification