Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Molecular Approach For Diagnosis Of Rickettsia: A Collaborative Initiative By Dept. Of Medicine & Microbiology Dr. Faria Ferdouse Thesis part student of M.Phil (Microbiology) Mymensingh Medical College Rickettsial diseases are a group of infections caused by the obligate intracellular bacteria Rickettsia. It is a Gram-negative, non flagellated, nonmotile, non-spore forming, highly pleomorphic bacteria. They are small, cocco-bacilli that can present as cocci or bacilli. They comprise a group of microorganisms that phylogenetically occupy a position between bacteria and viruses The name Rickettsiaceae honors Haword Taylor Ricketts for his brilliant experiments. Ricketts, as well as another famous rickettsiologist, Von Prowazek, died of rickettsia during their study period •From 1873 to 1920, 66% of 431 reported cases resulted in death in USA by Rocky mountain spotted fever. During 1983-1998, Five to thirty-nine deaths were reported annually to public health authorities. In 1918 R. felis was first detected in European cat fleas (Ctenocephalides felis) In 1990 rediscovered in the United States. In 2003 In Asia, the first case of R. felis infection reported. Recently has been demonstrated in Brazil, France, Germany, Texas, Mexico, Africa, Spain In 1993, WHO reported that, these are major causes of febrile illnesses throughout the AsiaPacific region, also present in several parts of the Indian subcontinent. From India in 2010 reported that 45.6% had spotted fever group and 30.7% scrub typhus & untreated cases can have fatality rates as high as 30-35%. For India, the reported numbers are an underestimate due to lack of community based data and non-availability of confirmatory laboratory tests. Rickettsial disease in India has been documented from Jammu, Kashmir, Himachal Pradesh, Uttaranchal, Rajasthan, Assam, West Bengal, Maharashtra, Kerala and Tamil Nadu Since Bangladesh is very adjacent to the West Bengal of India, it is very likely that the same Rickettsia would be responsible for certain illnesses such as PUO, however there is no scientific studies in Bangladesh so far. With this concept in the background, we conducted this study aiming at the following objectives: General objective: Diagnosis of Rickettsial infection by PCR and other conventional diagnostic tool. Specific objectives: To screen the Rickettsial fever by Weil-Felix test. To detect IgM antibody against Rickettsia specific antigen by ELISA. To diagnose Rickettsial fever by PCR using genus specific gene gltA (citrate synthetase) and 16s rDNA. A total of 155 clinicaliy suspected cases of febrile illness was selected from inpatient and outpatient department of medicine and pediatrics of MMCH during the period from july 2012 to september 2013. Blood was collected and from each of the patient with standard procedure in the department of microbiology MMCH for Weil felix test ,ELISA and PCR. • All the samples are tested by Weil felix test. In Weil felix test OXK,OX2 and OX19 strains of proteus are used to detect rikettsial antibody • ELISA was done only Weil felix test positive cases. • Rikettsial outer membrane lipopolysaccharide antigen were used for detection of antibody. •PCR was done for all the specimens (155) TABLE I Age & sex distribution of the cases Age group (n = 62) Female (n = 74) Total (n = 136) Up to 15 years 09 17 26 15 to 30 years 36 35 71 30 to 45 years 23 22 45 >45 years 06 07 13 74 (48%) 81 (52%) 155 (100%) Total Male Table II Clinical features of the cases Clinical features No. of presenting cases Percentage (%) Fever 155 100 Headache 98 63 Body ache 65 41 Cough 12 7.7 Rash 03 02 Conjunctival Hge 01 0.6 Table III Result of Weil-Felix test Weil-Felix Antigen Weil-Felix Test Positive Total tested 155 (100) Weil-Felix positive 136 (88%) OX-2 OX-K OX-19 47 All160, 1-320 09 (All 160, 1 – 320) 06 (All 160) OX-2 + OX-K OX-2 + OX-19 OX-19 + OX-K All three 25 17 10 22 TABLE IV Result of ELISA for IgM Total tested 129 (100%) ELISA for IgM Positive 31 (24%) Table V Result of PCR Total tested 155 (100%) PCR positive 61 (39%) Table VI Correlation of Weil-Felix and PCR PCR Positive Negative Weil-Felix test Positive Negative 59 02 77 16 Test Sensitivity Specificity Weil-Felix 96.72 43.38 PCR 100 100 Considering PCR as gold standard Table VII Correlation of ELISA and PCR PCR Positive Negative ELISA Positive Negative 20 41 13 81 Test Sensitivity Specificity ELISA 32.78 60.61 PCR 100 100 Considering PCR as gold standard Rickettssia PCR Date : 11/09/13 Primer : 17 K Da Product size: 232 bp 232 bp lane 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 Sl no. 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 Ladde r 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 Pos Pos Neg Neg Pos Neg Pos Neg Pos Pos Pos Pos Neg Neg Pos For confirmation of PCR product, Sequencing was done at Sapporo Medical University using Big Dye terminator. 1st email from Prof. Nobumichi Kobayashi On Wednesday, October 23, 2013 3:48 PM, Nobumichi Kobayashi <[email protected]> wrote: Dear Dr.Shyamal K. Paul, How are you? Salma arrived at Sapporo safely on Monday and started experiments on her study. I received a souvenir from you, through Salma. Thank you very much for it. We will try to taste it in our lunch or tea time. Today Souvik tried to determine sequences of five PCR products from suspected rickettsiosis brought by Salma. These five sequences were 99% identical to that of Rickettsia felis.This Rickettsia distributes to cats, and infect to human via cat flea.R. felis infection has been reported in some countries, but not in many countries, thus seems to be still rare. I guess probably all the specimens are clonal. This is very interesting finding. Next week, Souvik will complete sequencing of all the pcr products and send you results. Anyhow. please suggest Faria to search for literatures on R.felis as well as other common Rickettsia, to facilitate preparation of thesis. Sincerely, N.Kobayashi 2nd email from Prof. Nobumichi Kobayashi Dear Prof.Akram Hossain, Dr.Shyamal Paul, Thank you very much for your message. In my department, Souvik performed sequencing of 13 samples (2nd PCR products), out of 16 samples. Three samples could not be sequenced and these products may be nonspecific amplicons. Attached please find the original sequence data and alignment of 13 samples with Rickettsia felis strain, GenBank KF241854, which shows 99% identity, with only one mismatch. (shown in color in the file) Me and Souvik are now very busy, so further phylogenetic analysis will be done later. Please send these data to the Mphil student, Faria. I think that present study will be good enough for M Phil thesis as well as a good research paper in international journal. I have an idea for further study. Although detection of R. felis gene by nested PCR is highly interesting, 16S rRNA gene was not amplified, probably due to very less amount of Rickettsial cell in the blood samples. Therefore, I would like to analyze more genes, to confirm and characterize R. felis in Bangladesh. For this purpose, I would like to collect fleas from cats, i.e., wondring cats or those fed in houses of patients. Of course because Rickettsia is very dangerous bacteria, we should pay high level of attention for biohazards. Of course we never use them for culture. We should extract DNA from suspension of fleas and do PCR only. This is just introduction of my idea. Anyhow I hope to have good discussion and research activity when I visit MMC again. If you have any plan of PCR for next time (in my next visit in January), please tell me in advance, because I will prepare primers for it. Sincerely, N.Kobayashi Sequence Alignment Multiple alignment of 17 kDa antigen protein gene, partial cds, of Rickettsia felis strain, GenBank accession no. KF241854, with those of Rickettsia strains detected in humans inBangladesh. R_felis --TACTTGGTTCTCAATTCGGCAAGGGCAAAGGACAGCTTGTCGGAGTAGGTGTAGGTG 577 -TTACTTGGTTCTCAATTCGGTAAGGGCAAAGGACAGCTTGTCGGAGTAGGTGTAGGTG 5813 -TTACTTGGTTCTCAATTCGGTAAGGGCAAAGGACAGCTTGTCGGAGTAGGTGTAGGTG 5814 ATTACTTGGTTCTCAATTCGGTAAGGGCAAAGGACAGCTTGTCGGAGTAGGTGTAGGTG 5925 ATTACTTGGTTCTCAATTCGGTAAGGGCAAAGGACAGCTTGTCGGAGTAGGTGTAGGTG 5927 ATTACTTGGTTCTCAATTCGGTAAGGGCAAAGGACAGCTTGTCGGAGTAGGTGTAGGTG 5932 ---ACTTGGTTCTCAATTCGGTAAGGGCAAAGGACAGCTTGTCGGAGTAGGTGTAGGTG 5636 --TACTTGGTTCTCAATTCGGTAAGGGCAAAGGACAGCTTGTCGGAGTAGGTGTAGGTG 5740 --TACTTGGTTCTCAATTCGGTAAGGGCAAAGGACAGCTTGTCGGAGTAGGTGTAGGTG 5749 --TACTTGGTTCTCAATTCGGTAAGGGCAAAGGACAGCTTGTCGGAGTAGGTGTAGGTG 5767 -TTACTTGGTTCTCAATTCGGTAAGGGCAAAGGACAGCTTGTCGGAGTAGGTGTAGGTG 5871 CATTACTTGGTTCTCAATTCGGTAAGGGCAAAGGACAGCTTGTCGGAGTAGGTGTAGGTG 6072 --TACTTGGTTCTCAATTCGGTAAGGGCAAAGGACAGCTTGTCGGAGTAGGTGTAGGTG 5784 CATTACTTGGTTCTCAATTCGGTAAGGGCAAAGGACAGCTTGTCGGAGTAGGTGTAGGTG 60 ****************** ************************************* R_felis CATTACTTGGAGCAGTTCTTGGTGGACAAATAGGTGCAGGTATGGATGAGCAGGATAGAA 1177 CATTACTTGGAGCAGTTCTTGGTGGACAAATAGGTGCAGGTATGGATGAGCAGGATAGAA 11813 CATTACTTGGAGCAGTTCTTGGTGGACAAATAGGTGCAGGTATGGATGAGCAGGATAGAA 11814 CATTACTTGGAGCAGTTCTTGGTGGACAAATAGGTGCAGGTATGGATGAGCAGGATAGAA 11925 CATTACTTGGAGCAGTTCTTGGTGGACAAATAGGTGCAGGTATGGATGAGCAGGATAGAA 11927 CATTACTTGGAGCAGTTCTTGGTGGACAAATAGGTGCAGGTATGGATGAGCAGGATAGAA 11932 CATTACTTGGAGCAGTTCTTGGTGGACAAATAGGTGCAGGTATGGATGAGCAGGATAGAA 11636 CATTACTTGGAGCAGTTCTTGGTGGACAAATAGGTGCAGGTATGGATGAGCAGGATAGAA 11740 CATTACTTGGAGCAGTTCTTGGTGGACAAATAGGTGCAGGTATGGATGAGCAGGATAGAA 11749 CATTACTTGGAGCAGTTCTTGGTGGACAAATAGGTGCAGGTATGGATGAGCAGGATAGAA 11767 CATTACTTGGAGCAGTTCTTGGTGGACAAATAGGTGCAGGTATGGATGAGCAGGATAGAA 11871 CATTACTTGGAGCAGTTCTTGGTGGACAAATAGGTGCAGGTATGGATGAGCAGGATAGAA 12072 CATTACTTGGAGCAGTTCTTGGTGGACAAATAGGTGCAGGTATGGATGAGCAGGATAGAA 11784 CATTACTTGGAGCAGTTCTTGGTGGACAAATAGGTGCAGGTATGGATGAGCAGGATAGAA 120 ************************************************************ R_felis Sequence Alignment Multiple alignment of 17 kDa antigen protein gene, partial cds, of Rickettsia felis strain, GenBank accession no. KF241854, with those of Rickettsia strains detected in humans inBangladesh. R_felis ---TACTTGGTTCTCAATTCGGCAAGGGCAAAGGACAGCTTGTCGGAGTAGGTGTAGGTG 577 -************************************************************ R_felis GACTTGCTGAACTCACTTCACAAAGAGCTTTAGAAGCAACACCTAGCGGCACTAGCGTAG 1777 GACTTGCTGAACTCACTTCACAAAGAGCTTTAGAAGCAACACCTAGCGGCACTAGCGTAG 17813 GACTTGCTGAACTCACTTCACAAAGAGCTTTAGAAGCAACACCTAGCGGCACTAGCGTAG 17814 GACTTGCTGAACTCACTTCACAAAGAGCTTTAGAAGCAACACCTAGCGGCACTAGCGTAG 17925 GACTTGCTGAACTCACTTCACAAAGAGCTTTAGAAGCAACACCTAGCGGCACTAGCGTAG 17927 GACTTGCTGAACTCACTTCACAAAGAGCTTTAGAAGCAACACCTAGCGGCACTAGCGTAG 17932 GACTTGCTGAACTCACTTCACAAAGAGCTTTAGAAGCAACACCTAGCGGCACTAGCGTAG 17636 GACTTGCTGAACTCACTTCACAAAGAGCTTTAGAAGCAACACCTAGCGGCACTAGCGTAG 17740 GACTTGCTGAACTCACTTCACAAAGAGCTTTAGAAGCAACACCTAGCGGCACTAGCGTAG 17749 GACTTGCTGAACTCACTTCACAAAGAGCTTTAGAAGCAACACCTAGCGGCACTAGCGTAG 17767 GACTTGCTGAACTCACTTCACAAAGAGCTTTAGAAGCAACACCTAGCGGCACTAGCGTAG 17871 GACTTGCTGAACTCACTTCACAAAGAGCTTTAGAAGCAACACCTAGCGGCACTAGCGTAG 18072 GACTTGCTGAACTCACTTCACAAAGAGCTTTAGAAGCAACACCTAGCGGCACTAGCGTAG 17784 GACTTGCTGAACTCACTTCACAAAGAGCTTTAGAAGCAACACCTAGCGGCACTAGCGTAG 180 ************************************************************ R_felis AATGGCGTAATCCGGATAACGGTAATCATGGTTACGTAACACCTAATAAA-- 2277 AATGGCGTAATCCGGATAACGGTAATCATGGTTACGTAACACCTAATAA--- 22713 AATGGCGTAATCCGGATAACGGTAATCATGGTTACGTAACACCTAATAAAAC 23014 AATGGCGTAATCCGGATAACGGTAATCATGGTTACGTAACACCTAATAAAA- 23025 AATGGCGTAATCCGGATAACGGTAATCATGGTTACGTAACACCTAATAA--- 22827 AATGGCGTAATCCGGATAACGGTAATCATGGTTACGTAACACCTAATA---- 22732 AATGGCGTAATCCGGATAACGGTAATCATGGTTACGTAACACCTAATAA--- 22536 AATGGCGTAATCCGGATAACGGTAATCATGGTTACGTAACACCTAATAAA-- 22740 AATGGCGTAATCCGGATAACGGTAATCATGGTTACGTAAC------------ 21749 AATGGCGTAATCCGGATAACGGTAATCATGGTTACGTAACACCTAATAA--AATGGCGTAATCCGGATAACGGTAATCATGGTTACGTAACACCTAATAA--AATGGCGTAATCCGGATAACGGTAATCATGGTTACGTAACACCTAATAA--AATGGCGTAATCCGGATAACGGTAATCATGGTTACGTAACACCTAATAA--AATGGCGTAATCCGGATAACGGTAATCATGGTTACGTAACACCTAATAA--- 22667 22771 22972 22684 229 **************************************** Summary And Conclusion A total of 155 clinically suspected febrile patients were enrolled in the study. Out of them, 136 (88%), 31 (23%) and 61 (43%) were positive by Weil-Felix test, ELISA and PCR respectively. Out of the 61 PCR positive products, 16 were sequenced in Sapporo Medical University, Japan where 13 were found to be 99.9% consistent with Rickettsia felis. Considering PCR as gold standard, Weil-Felix test is found highly sensitive (96.72%) but it lacks good specificity (43.38%); whereas ELISA has a moderate specificity (60.61%) but its sensitivity is poor (32.78%). PCR is considered as gold standard since currently there is no provision for microscopy, culture &/or IFA tests at MMC. Further study On the basis of these finding, we are now keen to explore the relationship between the cat-flea and the R. felis. This study is now being conducted by Dr. Rajib Ahmed, Student of MPhil (Thesis part), Dept. of Microbiology, MMC. RECOMMENDATION In our study, Rickettsia is found as an important causative agent of febrile illness especially the PUO. So we recommend PCR as the confirmatory diagnostic option of choice for those cases of febrile illnesses which is not confirmed to be caused by other agents and when a preceding Weil-Felix test is positive. ACKNOWLEDGEMENT Prof. Nobumichi Kobayashi Assoc. Prof. Shyamal Kumar Paul Dr. Md. Chand Mahmud & Syeda Anjuman Nasrin Dr. Syed Ahmed Abdullah & Rajib Ahmed All faculty members, fellow students, Lab. technician & departmental staff Physicians of Medicine Dept. who referred the patients. Overview of Rickettsial fever Classification Rickettsiae A genus of small, rod-shaped, round to pleomorphic microorganisms in the order Rickettsiales. They are true bacteria, gram-negative, and cultivable only in living tissues. Transmitted by lice fleas and ticks, they cause disease in humans and domestic animals Also found in the cytoplasm of tissue cells of lice, fleas, ticks and mites, which may act as reservoirs and vectors Biological features Variable shape, coccobacilli Gram negative Microcapsule and slim layer Culture : in yolk sacs of embryonated eggs/ Tissue culture Rickettsia Transmission Maintain in animal and arthropod reservoirs (ticks, mites, lice, fleas by transovarian transmission). Transmitted to humans by arthropod vectors Humans are accidental hosts: acquired by arthropod bite or contact of arthropod excreta with abraded skin Pathogenesis No toxins, no immunopathology Rickettsia replicate in endothelial cells, cause cell damage and blood leakage, vasculitis, microthrombi, focal ischemia, hemorrhage, skin rash. Hypovolemia, hypoproteinemia, reduced perfusion, organ failure. Pathophysiology Laboratory Diagnosis Specimen: Blood & skin biopsy. Culture: Tissue culture or chick embryo. Direct detection in clinical specimen: PCR Immunofluorescence Serological diagnosis: Detection of rising titer of anti-rickettsial antibodies by ELISA. Weil-Felix reaction: no longer used because it is non specific. IFA reaction of a positive human serum on Rickettsia rickettsii grown in chicken yolk sacs, 400X