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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, July 2003, p. 4006-4011, Vol. 69, No. 7
0099-2240/03/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/AEM.69.7.4006-4011.2003
Copyright © 2003, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Gulf Coast Seafood Laboratory, U.S. Food and Drug Administration, Dauphin Island, Alabama 36528,1 Department of Veterinary Microbiology, Royal Veterinary and Agricultural University, DK-1870 Frederiksberg, Denmark,2 Department of Biology, University of North Carolina at Charlotte, Charlotte, North Carolina 28223,3 Department of Molecular Genetics and Microbiology, University of Florida College of Medicine, Gainesville, Florida 326104
Received 9 December 2002/ Accepted 28 April 2003
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Two major research needs identified at a 1994 V. vulnificus workshop sponsored by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) were to develop methods to distinguish virulent V. vulnificus strains from avirulent strains and to determine the infectious dose (22). Since human volunteer studies with V. vulnificus are not ethical, a consensus approach was proposed to determine the infectious dose by relating disease frequency with exposure. It was also suggested that a collection of strains from oysters and human septicemia cases associated with oyster consumption should be characterized in various assays in an attempt to determine traits that may be linked to virulence. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), FDA, and various state departments of health collected approximately 75 well-characterized clinical strains from human septicemia cases with known sources of oysters consumed, patient histories, etc. A recent study of the abundance of V. parahaemolyticus and V. vulnificus in retail oysters by the Interstate Shellfish Sanitation Conference and the FDA generated a large collection of V. vulnificus cultures that is seasonally and geographically diverse and well defined (3). Molecular characterization and virulence assays of representative V. vulnificus isolates from these two collections might reveal the importance of various traits for human infection and help determine the significance of total V. vulnificus numbers in oysters in terms of human illness.
Several putative virulence factors, such as the cytolysin-hemolysin, lipopolysaccharide, capsule, and siderophores, have been identified in V. vulnificus (10, 11, 18). The frequencies of occurrence of these factors are similar among clinical and environmental isolates (11); however, few isolates have been tested, and they usually have not been well defined. On the other hand, strains can easily be discriminated with various molecular techniques, such as pulsed-field gel electrophoresis and ribotyping. However, most strains examined have shown different genotypes, and so far the fingerprints generated by these techniques have not been useful in virulence prediction (2, 8, 19, 21).
Recent studies that have revealed the ability to discriminate between environmental and clinical strains present promising new approaches. Plasmids are associated with virulence of many bacterial species. A more sensitive plasmid detection technique for V. vulnificus, described by Danish researchers, was used to find plasmids that were not detected in clinical strains by standard plasmid isolation protocols (L. Høi, J. A. Gooch, A. Dalsgaard, and A. DePaola, Abstr. 99th Gen. Meet. Am. Soc. Microbiol. 1999, abstr. Q-316, p. 594, 1999). A randomly amplified polymorphic DNA (RAPD) PCR procedure was found to produce an extra DNA band (178 to 200 bp) for all 31 clinical V. vulnificus isolates tested but for only 2 of 39 environmental isolates (21). However, no particular gene was associated with this DNA band. University of Florida researchers recently reported a 1,000-fold difference in the doses of virulent and selected naturally attenuated V. vulnificus required to cause disease in subcutaneously (s.c.) inoculated, iron-dextran-treated mice (16). In each of these studies, either few isolates were tested or the source of the isolates and their association with oysters were not reported.
The objective of this study was to test the hypothesis that proposed molecular markers of virulence (RAPD-PCR amplicons or plasmids) or virulence (s.c.-inoculated, iron-dextran-treated mouse model) are more prevalent in clinical isolates of V. vulnificus than in isolates from market oysters.
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TABLE 1. Source information on V. vulnificus strains isolated from market oysters
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TABLE 2. Source information on V. vulnificus strains from primary septicemia cases
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The plasmid DNA was separated in a 0.8% (wt./vol) agarose gel (SeaKem GTG; Medinova, Hellerup, Denmark) in TAE buffer (89 mM Tris, 89 mM acetic acid, 2.5 mM EDTA; pH 8) at 10°C with a current of 135 mA for 4 h. The gels were stained with ethidium bromide (2 µg/ml; Sigma, St. Louis, Mo.) for 15 min, destained in distilled water, and photographed over a 354-nm UV transilluminator. Further, two-dimensional (2-D) gel electrophoresis was conducted according to the method of Hintermann et al. (6), which discriminates between covalently closed circular, open circular, and linear forms of plasmid DNA. Two consecutive steps of agarose gel electrophoresis with a single DNA sample were used. UV irradiation was performed between the steps to introduce single-strand nicks in ethidium bromide-stained DNA, converting covalently closed circular into open circular forms. Thus, differently configured forms of the same plasmid could be identified. Plasmid analyses were repeated at least twice for each strain.
RAPD analysis.
Cells were grown in 1 to 3 ml of heart infusion broth (Difco) overnight at 22°C with aeration. A 200-µl volume of the overnight culture was centrifuged at 14,000 rpm (Marathon Micro A centrifuge; Fisher Scientific, Pittsburgh, Pa.) for 5 min, the supernatant was discarded, and the pellet was suspended in 200 µl of sterile water. At a cell-free station, a master mix containing 2.5 µl of 10x reaction buffer (Promega), 3.5 µl of 25 mM MgCl2 (Promega), 1 to 2 µl of 5 mM deoxynucleoside triphosphate solution (Promega), 1 to 2 µl of a 5 mM primer solution (5' GGATCTGAAC 3'; Biosynthesis), 0.5 µl of Taq polymerase (Promega), and 8.5 to 9.5 µl of distilled water was made, and 20.0-µl volumes of this mix were placed into sterile 0.5-ml microcentrifuge tubes (USA Scientific, Inc., Ocala, Fla.). All solutions were held on ice. A total of 5.0 µl of each bacterial culture was added to the master mix to give a final reaction volume of 25 µl. Samples were vortexed and overlaid with 20 µl of sterile mineral oil (Sigma) to prevent evaporation. Thermal cycling was performed in a Techne (Princeton, N.J.) model PHC-3 thermal cycler. The cycling profile was as follows: 1 cycle of 94°C for 5 min; 45 cycles of 94°C for 1 min, 36°C for 1 min, 72°C for 2 min; and a final extension cycle of 72°C for 5 min. Fifteen to twenty microliters of PCR product was loaded on a 3% (wt/vol) agarose gel (Fisher Scientific) containing 0.5 µg of ethidium bromide/ml and electrophoresed in 0.5x TBE buffer (prepared from a 10x stock consisting of 0.89 M Tris, 0.89 M boric acid, and 25 mM EDTA) for as long as necessary to yield well-separated bands. The gels were photographed with a Polaroid Quick Shooter model QSP camera (International Biotechnologies, New Haven, Conn.). A 100-bp ladder (BioWhittaker Molecular Applications, Rockland, Maine) was used as a molecular size marker. Each time RAPD-PCR was performed, a clinical strain of V. vulnificus was included as a positive control while heart infusion broth served as a negative control.
Subcutaneously inoculated, iron-dextran-treated mouse model.
Virulence was measured using the s.c.-inoculated, iron-dextran-treated mouse model as previously described (16). Mice were injected intraperitoneally with iron-dextran (Sigma) at 250 µg/g of body weight 2 h before V. vulnificus inoculation. Groups of five mice were initially injected s.c. (lower back) with 103 CFU of bacteria suspended in phosphate-buffered saline containing 0.01% (wt/vol) gelatin. Four parameters were used to determine virulence: CFU per gram of skin lesion, CFU per gram of liver tissue, lesion size and quality score, and body temperature (rectal temperature recorded with a Traceable digital temperature probe [Fisher Scientific]). The most critical criterion for determining virulence was CFU per gram of skin lesion. A strain was labeled as virulent if three or more of five injected mice had 107 CFU/g of lesion or if the average for all of the lesions was 106 CFU/g. The CFU per gram of liver tissue, a decrease in body temperature below 37°C (a sign of severe illness), and the lesion score (0 = no lesion, 1 = discoloration without hemorrhage, 2 = hemorrhagic lesion <2 cm2, and 3 = hemorrhagic lesion >2 cm2) were also noted. If a strain did not meet the virulence criteria at the initial inoculation dose, the dose was increased to 105 CFU/mouse. If the higher dose caused symptoms of virulence, the strain was labeled as attenuated. However, if at a dose of 105 CFU the strain still did not meet the criteria for virulence, it was labeled as avirulent.
Differences in values for virulence measures between oyster and clinical strains were compared using the Student t test or Mann-Whitney U test. Because the 4-point lesion score does not yield a normal distribution, it was not subjected to statistical analysis.
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TABLE 3. Virulence markers in V. vulnificus isolates from market oysters and oyster-associated V. vulnificus primary septicemia cases
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FIG. 1. Plasmid profiles of selected V. vulnificus strains. Lanes: A, E. coli 39R861; B, E. coli V517; C, V. cholerae 1075/25; D, V. vulnificus CDC 9344-95; E, V. vulnificus CDC 9149-95; F, V. vulnificus CDC 9030-95; G, V. vulnificus CDC 9031-96; H, V. vulnificus CDC 9075-96. Strains in lanes E to H contain a band of approximately 40 kb that is a relaxed form of the 29-kb plasmid, and lane H also contains a relaxed form of the 6.9-kb plasmid.
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FIG. 2. Summary of quantitative data from mouse infection studies. Iron-dextran-treated mice were inoculated s.c. with 103 CFU of V. vulnificus. Data are means ± standard deviations of values for log CFU per gram of skin lesion (Lesion CFU), log CFU per gram of liver tissue (Liver CFU), and rectal temperature (Temp). For all groups, n = 25. *, P = 0.01 (Student t test); ^, P < 0.005 (Mann-Whitney U test).
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The original study by Warner and Oliver (21) determined that a ca. 178-bp amplicon was present in 100% of the clinical isolates tested. Subsequent studies (Y. Yano and J. D. Oliver, data) unpublished found that only 71% of clinical isolates possessed this band. At the same time, however, a band of ca. 460 bp was identified in 86% of these same strains. Thus, in the studies reported here, we focused on the 460-bp band as an indicator of virulence. Approximately half of both the oyster and the clinical cultures produced this band, as determined by RAPD-PCR. Therefore, the presence of this band did not correlate with the source of the strain, and since nearly all of the isolates were virulent when injected s.c. into iron-dextran-treated mice, the band did not correlate with virulence using that model. However, note that all strains employed in the present study were exclusively from primary septicemia cases associated with oyster consumption, whereas the clinical strains examined in the unpublished study were from a variety of sources.
A final goal of the present study was to determine whether the virulence of clinical isolates of V. vulnificus differs from that of oyster isolates, as measured in an animal model. When CFU per gram of skin lesion was measured after s.c. injection of V. vulnificus into iron-dextran-treated mice, 88% of both clinical and oyster isolates were classified as virulent. Most previous animal studies indicated that the majority of V. vulnificus strains are virulent regardless of their source (9, 17, 20); however, there is some evidence that not all strains present in oysters have the ability to cause human disease (8a). In contrast to our use of quantitative microbiology of infected mice, most of the previous studies used 50% lethal dose assays with death as an endpoint. We attempted to devise some combination of virulence criteria (e.g., decrease in body temperature or shorter time to euthanasia due to severity of illness) as a surrogate for death as an endpoint; however, no such marker was found to separate the two groups of V. vulnificus strains. Consistent with the lack of difference in virulence assigned by minimal levels of bacteria in skin lesions, local infection by clinical isolates, measured by determining the mean CFU per gram of skin lesion, was not significantly different from that by V. vulnificus strains from oysters. In contrast, when two criteria for systemic disease, CFU per gram of liver tissue and decreased body temperature (Fig. 2), were employed, clinical strains were capable of causing significantly more severe systemic disease than oyster strains. This result is not entirely unexpected because the clinical isolates were preselected by their ability to cause systemic disease whereas the oyster isolates did not undergo such a selection. Therefore, there may be two populations of virulent V. vulnificus strains in oysters, both of which are capable of causing skin disease but only one having the potential to cause sepsis.
In conclusion, no clear distinctions between V. vulnificus strains isolated from market oysters and those isolated from patients with oyster-associated V. vulnificus primary septicemia were observed with the three approaches used in this study. This collection of encapsulated V. vulnificus isolates should be useful for evaluating additional screening methods for their ability to distinguish between fully virulent and less virulent strains. For reasons of safety, essentially all encapsulated strains should be considered capable of causing human disease until effective screening methods have been identified. Since the incidence of serious V. vulnificus disease is relatively low, even among people in the populations deemed most at risk who consume raw oysters, attention should also be directed toward V. vulnificus levels in oysters and additional, unidentified predisposing conditions of people, with the goal of being able to better predict lethal outcomes of human-oyster-V. vulnificus encounters.
We acknowledge the Centers for Disease Control and the Food and Drug Administration Southeast Regional Laboratory for providing clinical and oyster strains, respectively. We thank Shih-Shan Lang at the University of Florida for assistance with mouse virulence studies.
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