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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, October 2003, p. 6268-6271, Vol. 69, No. 10
0099-2240/03/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/AEM.69.10.6268-6271.2003
Copyright © 2003, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Laboratorio de Genética e Immunología Molecular, Instituto de Biología, Universidad Católica de Valparaíso, Valparaíso, Chile
Received 4 February 2003/ Accepted 4 August 2003
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P. salmonis is an strict intracellular parasite which requires fish host cells to replicate, and as a consequence, it can be successfully grown within different established fish cell lines (9, 12). In general, most obligate intracellular species have been proven difficult to isolate and research progress on their molecular biology has been very slow (17). P. salmonis, as a recently reported rickettsia-like (9) is no exception, and its biology and behavior are poorly understood.
Cultivation of Piscirickettsia salmonis is inherently expensive and quite laborious. As examples, low yields are obtained in high-cost media; bacteria are incompletely released from infected cells; they compartmentalize and remain in close association with host-cell components; and more than half of the total infectious yield obtained is heavily contaminated with host cell debris (9).
Several techniques have been used to purify animal and human rickettsial (6, 15, 16). Particularly, density gradient centrifugation has been preferred to recover these organisms from in vitro-grown cells. Among them, Renografin and Percoll gradients have been the most efficient (2, 11). Nonetheless, when these techniques have been assayed with Piscirickettsia salmonis, the low bacterial yield obtained and the impurity of the samples with either nuclear or mitochondrial host-cell DNA contaminating, reliable molecular studies have been hampered. Indeed, a recent study (18) reports viable bacteria and in reasonable numbers, although nothing is said about the purity of the isolated DNA.
In here, we describe an alternative highly efficient semipreparative purification procedure to recover pure Piscirickettsia salmonis from an established fish cell line. The procedure relies on the high density and low osmolarity of iodixanol, an alternative iodinated compound to Renografin, which was used to generate isoosmotic density gradient centrifugation. A single band with high purity of viable bacteria was obtained, and its specificity confirmed by immunofluorescence microscopy and semiquantitative PCR analysis. At present, we are in the process of optimizing the procedure to make it applicable to bacterial purification from naturally in vivo infected fish organs.
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Purification of P. salmonis.
CHSE-214 monolayer cells grown on eight plastic culture triple flasks (3.600 cm2) were infected with P. salmonis (8) and incubated at 17°C for 8 to 12 days, when 80 to 90% cytopathic effect was reached. Cell culture supernatants were collected and centrifuged at 200 x g for 10 min at 4°C to pellet large host cell debris. This new and partially clean supernatant was centrifuged at 10,000 x g for 45 min at 4°C to collect bacteria. The pellet was resuspended in 6 ml of Tris-NaCl buffer (10 mM Tris-Cl, 1 mM EDTA, 150 mM NaCl, 12 mM MnCl2, pH 7.6) and incubated with 20 U of DNase I (Boehringer Mannheim) at 30°C for 60 min. Enzymatic activity of DNase I was inhibited by addition of 1/10 volume of 0.2 M EDTA.
Density gradient centrifugation.
Solutions of 26, 24, and 22% Optiprep (iodixanol; Nycomed, Oslo, Norway), an iodinated compound (7, 10) were prepared in buffer TEN (10 mM Tris-Cl, 1 mM EDTA, 150 mM NaCl, pH 7.6) from a 40% Optiprep stock master solution. A three-step discontinuous gradient (22%, 24%, and 26%) was set into clear ultracentrifuge tubes (16 by 102 mm) to form a continuous gradient within 60 min at room temperature. Sample suspensions were layered on top of two parallel gradients and centrifuged at 25,000 x g for 3 h at 4°C in an SW28 swinging-bucket rotor (Beckman Instruments). Bacterial bands were collected from each gradient and diluted 10-fold in TEN buffer and centrifuged at 11,000 x g for 30 min at 4°C. The resulting pellet was suspended in TEN buffer.
Direct immunofluorescence staining.
P. salmonis thin smears were fixed with 3% paraformaldehyde for 15 min and permeabilized with 0.1% Triton X-100 for 10 min, followed by three washes with phosphate-buffered saline alone and a fourth with PBSA (phosphate-buffered saline plus 0.5% bovine serum albumin). Bacteria were labeled in PBSA buffer for 1 h with a 1:75 dilution of a commercially available rabbit fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC)-conjugated anti-P. salmonis oligoclonal antibody (SRS Immuno Test; BIOSChile) and/or with a 1:50 dilution of a mouse FITC-conjugated anti-P. salmonis (iodixanol purified) antibody prepared in our laboratory. All procedures were carried out at room temperature in the dark. Coverslips were mounted onto glass slides with fluorescent mounting medium (Dako Corporation) and observed on a Zeiss LSM laser-scanning confocal microscope.
DNA isolation.
Bacterial genomic DNA was purified from banded bacteria and from Escherichia coli by the cetyltrimethylammonium bromide-NaCl procedure (1). Preparation of eukaryotic genomic DNA from a CHSE-214 monolayer culture was done by the tissue culture cell procedure in the presence of proteinase K (1). DNA concentrations were determined in a GeneQuant DNA/RNA calculator (Pharmacia Biotech).
Semiquantitative PCR amplification.
PCR amplification was performed by a serial dilution experiment in a total reaction volume of 10 µl. P. salmonis DNA was amplified with the specific primer pair RTS1 and RTS4, complementary to the intergenic transcribed spacer (ITS) region as described previously (13).
In order to estimate mitochondrial DNA contamination, primer pair P2 and Sphe, directed to the D-loop of the fish mitochondrial genome, were used (C. Orrego, unpublished data). All amplifications were performed in a Techne Cyclogene model FPHC3HT thermal cycler, and conditions were set in accordance with the annealing temperatures of the primer pair used. Amplicons were analyzed by agarose gel electrophoresis and visualized after ethidium bromide staining in a Gel Doc 1000 (Bio-Rad).
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Here, we describe a simple, straightforward, and effective procedure to separate, concentrate, and purify P. salmonis from its host. The procedure is based on differential sedimentation (200 x g, 10 min) followed by low-osmolarity, high-density gradient centrifugation on iodixanol (22 to 24 to 26%), as the resolving medium.
Infected supernatants from eight plastic culture triple flasks of CHSE-214-infected cells (1.1 x 108) were collected at 8 to 12 days postinfection, sedimented, and treated with DNase I to minimize host cell contamination, since infected cells remained as a monolayer. The effectiveness of the gradient was demonstrated by the absolute separation of the bacteria from host cell contaminants.
Figure 1 shows the whitish single band containing bacteria, consistently found in the upper third of the gradient corresponding to a buoyant density of 1.13 g ml-1. The gradient also resolved a diffuse, barely visible high-density band in the lower third (1.14 g ml-1), which mostly corresponded to cell mitochondria and microsomal debris. An aliquot of the upper band obtained was observed under the microscope, confirming the presence of Piscirickettsia salmonis when exposed to a commercial rabbit FITC-conjugated anti-P. salmonis antibody (Fig. 2). Next, and in order to confirm these observations, parallel samples were assayed by semiquantitative PCR amplification. Figure 3 shows the successful amplification of the ITS region of the bacterial rDNA operon (13), confirming the identity of the material banded as Piscirickettsia salmonis.
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FIG. 1. Equilibrium iodixanol preformed step gradient. Whitish band in the upper third is purified P. salmonis.
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FIG. 2. Microscopic characterization by direct immunofluorescence of the material banded on the iodixanol gradient. Magnification, x100. (A) FITC-labeled anti-P. salmonis (iodixanol purified). (B) Commercial FITC-labeled anti-P. salmonis.
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FIG. 3. Specific PCR amplification for P. salmonis rDNA. Primers against the ITS region of the rDNA operon were used. Lanes: 1, 160 ng/µl; lanes 2 to 6, serial dilutions from 10-1 to 10-5, respectively. L, 100-bp ladder.
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TABLE 1. DNAs in Fig. 4
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FIG. 4. Semiquantitative and competitive PCR amplifications. Primers against fish mitochondrial DNA were used to evaluate the purity of P. salmonis DNA. Lanes 1 to 7, CHSE-214 DNA; lanes 8 to 14, P. salmonis DNA; lanes 15 to 20, P. salmonis DNA mixed with CHSE-214 DNA in a 1:1 genome size ratio; lanes 21 to 27, E. coli DNA (JM109); lanes 28 to 32, E. coli DNA mixed with CHSE-214 DNA. L, 100-bp ladder.
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Next, to estimate the efficiency of our procedure, we applied the following rationale: We recovered 16 µg of DNA from the upper band of the iodixanol gradient. This corresponds to approximately 107 genomic units of an estimated 1.1 x 106 Da per genome of intracellular bacteria (5). Considering that we started with 1.1 x 108 infected host cells and that minimal effective infection is 10%, we are recovering 10 to 100 bacteria per CHSE-214-infected cell, which appears to be highly efficient. This theoretical calculation is consistent with kinetics of infection experiments run in our laboratory (data not shown). In addition, the confocal microscopy shown in Fig. 5 confirms that an average of 10 to 20 bacteria were clearly observed per infected CHSE-214 cell at 8 to 12 days postinfection, the time of our DNA isolation procedure. These estimations are in full agreement with those reported by others (11), where DNA obtained by an alternative procedure yielded numbers in the same log range.
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FIG. 5. Bacterial number estimation by confocal microscopy of CHSE-214 infected cells. (A) Phase contract microscopy. (B) Fluorescence microscopy, commercial FITC-labeled anti-P. salmonis antibody.
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We are grateful to Cristian Orrego for helpful recommendations and to Jorge Olivares for technical and experimental support.
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