Title: Gram negative spiral or curved bacteria
1Gram negative spiral or curved bacteria
- Campylobacter
- and
- Helicobacter
2Characteristics of Campylobacter
- Small curved Gram negative bacteria in the genus
Campylobacter and other similar genera inhabit
the gastric and intestinal mucosa of warm blood
animals causing various gastrointestinal
syndromes - The organism was likely first described in fetal
tissues of aborted sheep in 1913, but the type
strain (eventually C. jejuni) was not reported
until 1931. The organism was initially named
Vibrio fetus due to its curved nature. Vibrio
was the only known curved rod at the time - Years later Elizabeth King at the CDC described a
group of microaerophilic curved bacteria from the
blood of children with acute dysentery, the first
report of this type bacteria in human clinical
specimens. - The bacteria were first isolated when fecal
emulsions were filtered (0.65?m pore size) onto
blood agar plates and incubated for a week in a
moist carbon dioxide enriched environment
3Campylobacter
4continued
- Genetics studies eventually demonstrated that
these organisms were not related to Vibrio. The
type strain was named Campylobacter jejuni since
it is most abundant in the jejunal region of the
small intestine - From research conducted with human volunteers,
it was shown that the bacteria were not strict
anaerobes nor would they grow in ambient air.
They were, in fact, microaerophilic, capnophilic
(love elevated CO2), and required a humid
environment - It was further determined that their optimum
growth temperature was not 37oC but 42oC (the
body temperature of birds) - A good selective medium for the C. jejuni is SBA
supplemented with antibiotics. The medium is
called Campy-BAP or CBA - Nearly all Campylobacter clinical isolates found
in the U.S. come from fecal samples
5Laboratory Methods
- Specimen collection and transport techniques that
are useful for Salmonella, Shigella, and EHEC
will suffice for Campylobacter - Streak CBA for isolation and place in a Campy
Pouch or other commercial product to give
microaerophilic, capnophilic conditions.
Incubation is at 42oC for 48 h - Fecal samples are not routinely directly examined
for Campylobacter, but rather are examined for
fecal leukocytes. There is a strong association
between intestinal Campylobacter infections and
fecal leukocytes. - Some microbiologists advocate performing a wet
prep and observing for fecal leukocytes as well
as the characteristic rapid darting motility of
Campylobacter
6Laboratory Methods
- Others advocate a direct basic fuchsin or Gram
stain of feces because of the claim that
Campylobacter will be a predominant organism in
the stool sample of intestinal Campy infections - The characteristic cell morphology (S shapes,
gull-wings and long spirals) can be seen via
direct examination of feces - Some microbiologists advocate using Campy thio
media in addition to CBA plate for primary
isolation and culturing. Campy thio is
conventional thioglycollate (reducing agent)
supplemented with antibiotics vs enterics. - The inoculated Campy thio media is incubated in
the refrigerator (for how long?) Campy can
reach log phase growth at 4oC but enterics
cannot. - Growth is taken from 5-10 mm below the medium
surface and subcultured, and these plates are
incubated under the conditions appropriate for
growing Campylobacter
7Laboratory Methods
- A few other bacterial species will occasionally
grow on CBA at 42oC, especially Pseudomonas
aeruginosa. - This is potentially problematic since both
organisms are oxidase and catalase positive,
however they are easily distinguished via - morphologically distinct
- motility pattern recall the rapid darting of
Campylobacter - Pseudomonas will grow on SBA in ambient air
- There are in fact many species of Campylobacter
and other related curved and spiraled Gram
negative bacteria - Most symptomatic human infections, as far as we
can tell at present, are caused by C. jejuni C.
coli is the second most common species - Not all of these related species will grow at
42oC on CBA
8Laboratory Methods
- Few labs attempt definitive Campy ID unless the
isolate is from blood or other sterile sites.
The reported isolation of an enteric
Campylobacter is considered adequate for the
physician - C. jejuni does have one unique characteristic
among the Campylobacter-like bacteria it is
hippurate positive. The test is based on the
ability of a microbe to hydrolyze hippuric acid
(with the enzyme hippuricase) releasing the amino
acid serine. Serine is then detected with the
reagent ninhydrin turns purple. - The rapid hippurate hydrolysis test is a
three-hour test. - A positive hippurate hydrolysis test on a small,
curved, Gram negative, catalase and oxidase
positive rod that grows optimally under
microaerophilic conditions at 42oC, and has
darting motility is reported as C. jejuni. - A negative test is reported as enteric
Campylobacter-like organism isolated
9Campylobacter pathology
- Recent methods indicate that infections are
frequent and widespread. It has a worldwide
distribution. In most parts of the U.S. C. jejuni
is isolated more frequently than Salmonella and
Shigella. This is fairly new info., and was a
big revelation. - It is isolated from 4 to 35 of fecal samples
from people with diarrheal disease. - Associated with many animals, but especially
large birds (those that we eat). The body
temperature of birds is 42oC. Can pass to the
genitourinary tract of infected non-human animals
where it often causes spontaneous abortion. - Gastroenteritis-dysentery can be moderate to
severe, and is associated with fecal-contaminated
meat, unpasteurized dairy and water. Symptoms
include explosive bloody diarrhea, abdominal
pain, fever, nausea, and vomiting. Extent of
blood in feces generally surpasses most other
invasive enterocolitic pathogens.
10continued
- For most people Campy dysentery is self-limiting
in 3 to 7 days - Septic arthritis and meningitis have been
reported as complication of Campylobacter
infections - Recently found to be the most common pathogenic
antecedent to a common neurological condition,
Guillain-Barré syndrome. The connection is not
yet understood - It is also thought to be associated with
demyelinating disease of the peripheral nerves
11Campylobacter jejuni on CBA
42oC 48h microaerophilic conditions
12Characteristics of Helicobacter
- Helicobacter pylori was discovered in 1982 in the
gastric mucosa of humans, and was initially
included in the genus Campylobacter because of
its curved, spiraled shape - Genetic, morphological, and biochemical
differences lead to the establishment of the new
genus. Perhaps the biggest difference between
them is the strong urease produced by H. pylori - Helicobacter moves by rapid corkscrew motility
using one or more sheathed flagella sort of a
hybrid motility - The primary sources of the organism appear to be
unpasteurized milk and contaminated surface
water. - Based upon limited serological testing, it is
estimated that one-half of the worlds population
is or has been infected with H. pylori.
Fortunately, it appears that only 10 of those
infected will develop GI pathology from the
organism.
13Helicobacter pylori
14continued
- Incidence of infection is very low in U.S.
children but infections in the elderly may be as
high as 80. - Once established in the gastric mucosa infection
can persist for life unless treated with
antibiotics. The majority of cases (90) are
asymptomatic but there is overwhelming evidence
that H. pylori is the leading cause of, or
contributor to gastritis. - Due to the long-standing conventional wisdom that
peptic ulcers were caused by stress or
environmental factors, the medical community
was initially skeptical about the connection
between H. pylori and gastritis - As part of the evidence that H. pylori causes
gastritis the discoverer infected himself and
developed peptic ulcers. Barry Marshall Robbin
Warren jointly won the 2005 Nobel prize for
science for their role in linking H. pylori to
peptic ulcers
15continued
- Circumstantial evidence of a bacterial etiology
of gastritis included the fact that over the
counter medications such as Pepto-Bismol,
Tagamet and Zantac were shown to inhibit H.
pylori in vitro - Helicobacter cinnaedi and H. fennelliae are
sexually transmitted species. Both are rarely
encountered, and are isolated primarily from
homosexual men.
16Clinical Significance
- H. pylori uses fimbriae for specific attachment
to proteins in the stomach mucosa. Individuals
with type O blood have the greatest chance of
gastritis, apparently because their mucosal
proteins have a high affinity for H. pylori
fimbriae. - Spiral motility allows penetration through the
mucus into the epithelial side of the mucosa. A
potent urease produced by H. pylori releases
ammonia neutralizing the environment surrounding
individual bacteria, thus protecting them from
the HCL in gastric juice, but also contributing
to the symptoms. - H. pylori also induces a strong inflammatory
response in the mucosa resulting in accumulation
of PMNs and macrophages - In these ways, H. pylori causes gastritis and
peptic ulcers with recurrent pain, bleeding and
inflammation.
17continued
- Infected individuals produce antibodies specific
for H. pylori. Although they seem to afford
little protection against the pathogen, they are
the basis for a serological test. - High titers of IgG can be demonstrated in
chronically infected individuals. These
individuals seem to be at a much higher risk of
developing carcinoma of the stomach
18Diagnostic Techniques
- H. pylori was first detected using Warthin-Starry
silver stained gastric biopsies. H. pylori does
not Gram stain well - The urease test is rapid and reliable for
detection. A small piece of gastric biopsy
placed in urea medium will yield the urease
reaction within two hours if H. pylori is
present. The down side is that a surgical
procedure is needed to procure the specimen - Another diagnostic test is the breath test.
Patients swallow a pill containing radioactive
urea (13C or 14C). H. pylori in the stomach
hydrolyzes the radioactive urea releasing radio
active CO2 which is detectable in their breath.
The disadvantage of this procedure is the
requirement of a special instrument to detect
radio active carbon dioxide
19Urease test
20Diagnostic Techniques
- H. pylori can be cultured on a variety of
selective or nonselective media containing blood,
heme, or charcoal - Culture is not usually performed because
Helicobacter requires 3-7 days to form tiny
colonies, and cultures often do not grow due
apparently to inherent inhibitors in gastric
biopsies - As mentioned previously, serum antibodies can be
detected in the chronically infected. ELISA
based tests are commercially available
21Comparison of Helicobacter and Campylobacter
Reservoir Humans Humans Humans Birds and
other animals Pigs Cattle and sheep
Human Disease Gastritis and Peptic
ulcers Proctitis, enteritis, sepsis Proctitis,
enteritis, sepsis Explosive bloody
diarrhea Explosive bloody diarrhea Systemic
infections
H.pylori H. cinnaedi H. finnelliae C.
jejuni C. coli C. foetus