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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, March 2007, p. 1415-1419, Vol. 73, No. 5
0099-2240/07/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/AEM.01968-06

Division of Parasitic Diseases, National Center for Infectious Diseases, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Public Health Service, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Atlanta, Georgia,1 Atlanta Research and Education Foundation in Conjunction with the Atlanta VA Medical Center, Decatur, Georgia,2 U.S. Pacific Basin Agricultural Research Center, U.S. Department of Agriculture, Hilo, Hawaii3
Received 18 August 2006/ Accepted 19 December 2006
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Humans become infected by eating raw or undercooked infected mollusks, as well as food items contaminated with infective third-stage larvae, infected mollusks, or infected paratenic hosts. Whether produce contaminated with mollusk secretions can serve as a vehicle for angiostrongyliasis remains to be confirmed (7, 15, 25). Following ingestion, the third-stage larvae migrate to the brain and spinal cord tissues. They may molt twice to become young adults. In humans they infrequently migrate to the lungs. Instead, they remain in the central nervous system, causing tissue damage and subsequent inflammation. The disease is mostly self-limited, with full recovery within a month, but severe cases can result in persistent neurological problems or even death (1). Up to 1992 at least 2,500 cases had been reported worldwide, but this is most likely a vast underestimate of the true incidence, in part due to diagnostic challenges (10, 17). In 2000, a food-borne outbreak affected 12 American tourists visiting Jamaica (27). In Hawaii, human infections have been detected since 1962 and are still sporadically associated with consumption of contaminated food items (9, 18, 20). This illustrates the fact that human A. cantonensis infections continue to have public health relevance.
A. cantonensis is a known cause of human disease in Southeast Asia (4, 24) and has spread to new territories, probably via human cargo ships that unintentionally carried infected rats and/or snails (17). This parasite is endemic in most of the Pacific Basin, including the Hawaiian Islands, parts of Africa, Cuba, Puerto Rico, the Bahamas, and the Dominican Republic. Recently, A. cantonensis was detected in rats and mollusks in new geographic locations, including Jamaica and Haiti (19, 26). A. cantonensis was detected in rats in New Orleans in 1988 (7), and the first human case there was detected in 1995 (23). Recent reports of infections in captive animals suggest that the parasite may have spread to Mississippi and Florida (11, 13). It is likely that expansion of the range of A. cantonensis will continue as long as there are rats and mollusks that can maintain its life cycle, leading to an increasing risk for human disease. The introduction of exotic mollusks that are associated with human habitats into regions where the organism is endemic, including Parmarion cf. martensi (Simroth) in Hawaii, also increases the exposure of humans to third-stage larvae. Monitoring the territorial spread of this nematode and proper identification of its local rat and mollusk hosts are crucial for preventing and controlling human disease. In this study we developed a PCR-based method for detection and identification of A. cantonensis in mollusks. The molecular approach described here was also applied to mucus samples from naturally infected mollusks in order to assess use of the procedure for detection of secreted larvae.
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Morphological identification of A. cantonensis.
Tissue pieces (6 to 53 mg) were cut from the posterior end of the mollusk's foot and placed in 1 ml of 0.01% pepsin-0.7% HCl in individual wells of a 24-well culture dish (Corning Inc., Corning, NY) for digestion of the tissue (14). The larvae that were released were identified as A. cantonensis on the basis of morphological features (2). To collect mucus secretions, slugs were kept individually in polystyrene petri dishes (60 by 15 mm; Becton Dickinson & Co, Franklin Lakes, NJ) overnight, with occasional prodding to stimulate secretion. The mucus samples were treated with pepsin-HCl to facilitate collection of larvae for identification by microscopy.
For the experiment with mucus samples spiked with A. cantonensis, larvae were isolated from infected slug tissue as described above and washed with Livsey spring water. The spiking procedure was performed using visualization with a dissecting microscope. Larvae were counted, and defined numbers of larvae (1 to 37 larvae) were transferred to approximately 0.3-g aliquots of mucus from noninfected slugs using a glass pipette that had been modified using a flame to decrease the diameter of the tip. The spiked mucus was then subjected to DNA extraction and PCR analysis.
DNA extraction.
DNA was extracted from purified nematode larvae and mucus samples by digestion with 0.1 µg proteinase K/ml in a buffer consisting of 50 mM Tris-HCl (pH 8.5), 1% laureth-12, and 1 mM EDTA overnight at 56°C, followed by incubation at 95°C for 10 min to inactivate the proteinase K. The mucus secretions required an additional purification step with QIAquick columns (QIAGEN Inc., Valencia, CA) to remove PCR inhibitors. DNA in intact fresh or frozen mollusk tissue was extracted using the FastDNA method (Q-Biogene, Carlsbad, CA) with the modifications described previously (12). Disruption of samples in an FP120 cell disruptor was performed at speed 5.5 for 30 s. PCR inhibitors were removed by further purification with a QIAquick PCR purification kit (QIAGEN Inc., Valencia, CA) used according to the manufacturer's instructions. Purified DNA was stored at 4°C until it was used in PCRs.
PCR amplification.
Primers AngioF1 and AngioR1 (Table 1) were designed to amplify a 1,134-bp fragment of the 18S rRNA gene of Angiostrongylus spp. based on BLAST searches and multiple alignments of 18S rRNA sequences from various nematodes and mollusks. Primer sequences were revised using the Primer Express software (Applied Biosystems, Foster City, CA) to check for potential secondary structures and primer-dimers. The 50-µl PCR mixtures contained 0.4 µM of each primer and AmpliTaq Gold PCR Master Mix (Applied Biosystems, Foster City, CA). Amplification was carried out with a GeneAmp 9700 PCR thermal cycler (Applied Biosystems, Foster City, CA) using the following cycling parameters: 95°C for 5 min, 45 cycles of 95°C for 15 s, 65°C for 15 s, and 72°C for 1 min, and 72°C for 10 min. The products were detected on 1.5% agarose gels stained with ethidium bromide. Positive PCR products were purified and sequenced as described below, using AngioF1, AngioR1, NEM2, NEM3, and NEM3R (Table 1) as sequencing primers.
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TABLE 1. Oligonucleotides used in this study
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PCR primers were designed to amplify a 1,134-bp DNA fragment of the Angiostrongylus spp. 18S rRNA gene. The primers were initially tested with DNA from the isolated larvae, as well as with DNA extracted directly from tissue pieces from the 34 semislugs mentioned above, and identical PCR results were obtained for the two types of starting material (Fig. 1). No amplification was observed from the nine semislugs that were negative for larvae as determined by microscopy. To ensure that negative PCR results were not caused by PCR inhibitors in the DNA samples, generic primers NEM2 and NEM3R were utilized to amplify a 600-bp fragment from the molluscan 18S rRNA in each sample analyzed. These results allowed us to omit larval isolation and use this method with DNA extracted directly from the mollusks.
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FIG. 1. Gel containing selected samples from the Angiostrongylus spp. PCR. The arrow indicates the size (1,134 bp) of the expected PCR products. Lane 11 contained a 100-bp ladder DNA size marker. Lanes 1 though 3 show results obtained with fresh P. martensi tissue (lane 1, larvae isolated from an infected individual; lane 2, tissue from the same individual; lane 3, tissue from noninfected P. martensi). Lanes 4 through 10 show the effect on storage of Angiostrongylus-infected tissue from P. martensi (lane 4, 1 month of storage at 18°C; lane 5, 1 month of storage at 18°C followed by storage for 24 h at 5°C; lane 6, 1 month of storage at 18°C followed by storage for 24 h at room temperature; lane 7, 2 weeks of storage in 70% ethanol; lane 8, 4 weeks of storage in 70% ethanol; lane 9, 2 weeks of storage in 95% ethanol; lane 10, 4 weeks of storage in 95% ethanol). Lanes 12 through 16 show results for mucus secretions spiked with known numbers of A. cantonensis larvae (lane 12, no larvae; lane 13, one larva; lane 14, two larvae; lane 15, 10 larvae; lane 16, 37 larvae). Lane 17 and 18 show results for mucus excreted from two A. cantonensis-infected P. martensi individuals. Lanes 19 and 20 show results for non-Angiostrongylus nematodes (lane 19, free-living nematode belonging to an unknown species; lane 20, Dipetalonema sp.).
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PCR detection of A. cantonensis in mollusk secretions.
Mucus secretions from 46 P. martensi semislugs were tested for the presence of A. cantonensis. Since PCR analysis was incompatible with the pepsin treatment necessary for morphological identification, it was not possible to examine the same samples by both methods. Twelve mucus samples from naturally infected slugs were analyzed by microscopy, while 34 mucus samples, 13 of which were from slugs infected with A. cantonensis, were utilized for DNA extraction and PCR. Microscopy analysis revealed one and four motile larvae in two of the samples. One of the samples analyzed by PCR was positive for A. cantonensis. The possibility of false-negative results due to PCR inhibitors was again excluded by successfully amplifying slug DNA using generic primers NEM2 and NEM3R. To ensure that the methodology was appropriate, secretions from noninfected slugs were experimentally spiked with known numbers of larvae and then subjected to DNA extraction and PCR. This spiking experiment revealed that DNA from A. cantonensis could indeed be amplified from mucus, and as little as one larva in a sample was enough for a positive PCR (Fig. 1). Thus, assuming that the sensitivity of both microscopy and PCR was 100%, only 3 of 25 (12%) naturally infected slugs shed A. cantonensis larvae in their mucus.
Evaluation of primer specificity.
We used the PCR method described above with two other nematode species available for PCR analysis, one Dipetalonema nematode and 14 individuals of an unidentified free-living nematode species. The Angiostrongylus-specific 1,134-bp product was never amplified from DNA extracted from these nematodes (Fig. 1).
All amplicons produced by the Angiostrongylus spp. PCR were sequenced for identification at the species level. All sequences obtained from the mollusks and mucus secretions analyzed in this study (as described above) were identical to the 18S rRNA sequence from A. cantonensis deposited in the GenBank database (accession number AY295804). However, cross-reactivity of the primers was detected when the PCR was applied to a larger set of snails and slugs that were collected for a geographical survey study of the presence of A. cantonensis in the molluscan fauna of Hawaii (16). Of 49 mollusks with a positive result in the PCR, 3 were found to be false positives for A. cantonensis by sequence analysis. The sequences of the three PCR products were identical to each other but differed from the A. cantonensis sequence by 1.1%. BLAST searches could not identify the origin of the amplified sequence, but the highest similarity scores were obtained for the nematode Troglostrongylus wilsoni (GenBank accession number AY295820). Thus, using the PCR alone for detection of A. cantonensis may produce false-positive results due to cross-reactivity with other nematode species.
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The PCR method was successfully applied to mucus secretions from P. martensi. Spiking experiments revealed that the PCR could detect a single A. cantonensis larva in approximately 0.3 g of secretions. Despite this, the majority of naturally infected P. martensi semislugs examined in this study did not have detectable levels of larvae in their mucus. Since the notion that mollusks infected with A. cantonensis can shed larvae in their mucus trails was first suggested, other workers have found no or very few A. cantonensis larvae secreted from infected mollusks (3, 7, 8). Similar results have been obtained for excretion of other Angiostrongylus species (6, 15, 25, 28).
As determined by experimental spiking of larvae into mucus, the PCR could detect one larva per sample analyzed. The corresponding sensitivity of the PCR in mollusk tissue is more difficult to determine since equivalent spiking experiments are not feasible. The tissue from naturally infected mollusks examined by microscopy was estimated to contain between 1 and 19 larvae per mg of tissue depending on the individual, and all mollusks identified as positive by microscopy were determined to be positive by the Angiostrongylus spp. PCR. Thus, assuming that the larvae were evenly distributed in the foot of each mollusk, the PCR was able to detect at least one larva per mg of tissue.
The PCR method presented here may also be useful for detecting Angiostrongylus costaricensis, a parasitic nematode that causes gastrointestinal disease (22). A. costaricensis has a life cycle similar to that of A. cantonensis, including the fact that mollusks are intermediate hosts that transmit the disease to humans (21). The PCR primers described in this study are based on regions where these two parasites have almost identical sequences (GenBank accession number DQ116748), making it possible to use this PCR to examine mollusks for the presence of A. costaricensis, as well as A. cantonensis. The two species can be differentiated by sequence analysis. In addition to amplifying the intended Angiostrongylus species sequence, the PCR primers were found to interact with an unidentified nematode species. This finding emphasizes the importance of sequence analysis of the PCR amplicons. It also highlights the need for further evaluation of the specificity of the PCR primers for DNA from more nematode species, especially those that are associated with mollusks.
The findings and conclusions in this paper are those of the authors and do not necessarily represent the views of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The use of trade names is for identification only and does not imply endorsement by the Public Health Service or by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.
Published ahead of print on 28 December 2006. ![]()
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