|
wildlife and zoo assay data sheet
Mycobacterium chelonae
in amphibians
Test
code: B0071 -
Ultrasensitive detection of
Mycobacterium chelonae by real time PCR.
B0071 is
included in P0030 -
PCR panel for mycobacteriosis in amphibians
Mycobacteriosis
in amphibians, especially frogs, is caused by acid-fast bacilli
of the genus Mycobacterium.
Many mycobacterial species found in the environment can cause
infection in amphibians, including
M. marinum,
M. chelonae, M. ulcerans,
M. liflandii and
M. xenopi (Mve-Obiang et al., 2005, Trott et al., 2004). All these
mycobacerial species are ubiquitous in nature and can be found
in water. They are resistant to normal water treatment.
Mycobacteriosis
is a serious threat to the health of a frog colony, although
tuberculosis usually only results in frogs which are already
ill, are stressed or have weakened immune systems. Infected
frogs will usually develop cutaneous and visceral milliary
granulomas (white millet-like bumps) and ulcerative lesions on
the skin. Any of these mycobacteria can also gain entry to a
frog’s body through the skin wounds and lesions. Once through
the skin, these mycobacteria can also affect internal organs.
Mycobacterium chelonae is a fast-growing, nontuberculous mycobacterial species. It
is a normal commensal in water and soil that can cause disease
in humans, fish and amphibians. Recently, this mycobacterium was
isolated from captive South African clawed frogs (Xenopus laevis)
showing chronic weight loss and nonhealing ulcerative skin
lesions (Green et al., 2000), and also from dolphin showing
pyogranulomas in blubber, as well as marked acute multifocal
necrosuppurative pneumonia and lymphadenitis (Wünschmann et al.,
2008).
M. chelonae
can cause a mortality rate of 90% in
infected immunocompromised human patients such as AIDS or cancer
patients. In humans, infection is usually via the pulmonary
route.
Diagnosis of infections caused by mycobacteria, especially
nontuberculous mycobacteria, remains a difficult task both in
microbiology and pathology. Culture identification followed by
biochemical analysis is often slow and may not differentiate
pathogenic from nonpathogenic mycobacteria species due to their
close similarity. False positives occur in this way in both
staining and culture, particularly in environmental specimens.
Molecular detection by PCR, on the other hand, is a rapid,
sensitive and specific technique for sensitive mycobacterial
detection and differentiation.
Utilities:
-
Confirm the disease causing agent
-
Shorten the time required to confirm a clinical
diagnosis
-
Ensure that animal facilities or amphibian populations
are free of this mycobacterium
-
Early prevention of spread of this mycobacterium in a
facility or geographic area
-
Minimize human exposure to this mycobacterium
-
Safety monitoring of biological products that derive
from susceptible animals
References:
Schwabacher H. (1959) A strain of Mycobacterium isolated from
skin lesions of a cold blooded animal,
Xenopus laevus, and
its relation to atypical acid-fast bacilli occurring in man. J.
Hygiene, 57:57-67 Mve-Obiang, A., Lee, R.E., Umstot, E.S.,
Trott, K.A., Grammer, T.C.,
Parker, J.M.,
Ranger, B., Grainger, R., Mahrous, E.A. and Small, P.L.C. (2005)
A newly discovered mycobacterial pathogen isolated from lethal
infections in laboratory colonies of Xenopus species produces a
novel form of the M. ulcerans macrolide toxin, mycolactone.
Infect. and Immun. 73: 3307-3312. Trott, K.A.,
Stacy, B.A., Lifland, B.D., Diggs, H.E., Harland, R.M., Khokha,
M.K., Grammer, T.C. and Parker, J.M. (2004) Characterization of
a Mycobacterium ulcerans-like infection in a colony of African
Tropical Clawed Frogs (Xenopus tropicalis) Comp. Med. 54:
309-317.
Green, S. L.,
Lifland, B. D., Bouley, D. M., Brown, B. A., Wallace, R. J., Jr.
and Ferrell, J. E., Jr. (2000) Disease attributed to
Mycobacterium chelonae
in South African clawed frogs (Xenopus
laevis). Comp. Med. 50: 675-679. Wünschmann, A., Armien,
A., Beth Harris, N., Brown-Elliott, B.A., Wallace R.J., Jr.,
Rasmussen, J., Willette, M. and Wolf, T. (2008) Disseminated
Panniculitis in a Bottlenose Dolphin (Tursiops
truncatus) due to
Mycobacterium chelonae
Infection. J. Zoo Wildlife Med. 39: 412-420.
Specimen requirements:
Cloacal and
skin swab, or lesion swab, or skin scraping.
For specimen
types other than those listed here, please call to confirm
specimen acceptability and shipping instructions.
For all
specimen types, if there will be a delay in shipping, or during
very warm weather, refrigerate specimens until shipped and ship
with a cold pack unless more stringent shipping requirements are
specified. Frozen specimens should be shipped so as to remain
frozen in transit. See shipping
instructions for more information.
Turnaround time:
2 business days
Methodology:
Qualitative real time PCR panel
Normal range:
Nondetected
|