Isolation, Identification, and Molecular Characterization of Strains of Photorhabdus luminescens from Infected Humans in Australia

Author:

Peel Margaret M.1,Alfredson David A.2,Gerrard John G.2,Davis Jennifer M.1,Robson Jennifer M.3,McDougall Rodney J.3,Scullie Barry L.4,Akhurst Raymond J.5

Affiliation:

1. Microbiological Diagnostic Unit, The University of Melbourne, Parkville, Victoria 3052,1

2. Gold Coast Hospital, Southport, Queensland 4215,2

3. Sullivan Nicolaides Pathology, Taringa, Queensland 4068,3

4. Wangaratta District Base Hospital Pathology Service (Melbourne Pathology), Wangaratta, Victoria 3677,4 and

5. Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO) Entomology, Canberra, Australian Capital Territory 2601,5 Australia

Abstract

ABSTRACT We describe the isolation of Photorhabdus ( Xenorhabdus ) luminescens from four Australian patients: two with multiple skin lesions, one with bacteremia only, and one with disseminated infection. One of the patients had multiple skin lesions following the bite of a spider, while the lesions in the other patient were possibly associated with a spider bite. The source of infection for the remaining two patients is unknown. As a member of the family Enterobacteriaceae , P. luminescens is unusual in that it fails to reduce nitrate and ferments only glucose and mannose. It gives negative reactions for lysine decarboxylase, arginine dihydrolase, and ornithine decarboxylase (Moeller). The species is motile, utilizes citrate, hydrolyzes urea, and usually produces a unique type of annular hemolysis on sheep blood agar plates incubated at 25°C. A weak bioluminescence is the defining characteristic. P. luminescens is an insect pathogen and is symbiotically associated with entomopathogenic nematodes. Its isolation from human clinical specimens has been reported previously from the United States. Restriction fragment length polymorphism-PCR analysis of the 16S rRNA gene demonstrated a high level of similarity among the Australian clinical strains and significant differences between the Australian clinical strains and the U.S. clinical strains. However, numerical analyses of the data suggest that the two groups of clinical strains are more similar to each other than they are to the symbiotic strains found in nematodes. This is the first report of the isolation of P. luminescens from infected humans in Australia and the second report of the isolation of this species from infected humans worldwide.

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

Subject

Microbiology (medical)

Reference23 articles.

1. Morphological and functional dimorphism in Xenorhabdus spp., bacteria symbiotically associated with the insect pathogenic nematodes Neoaplectana and Heterorhabditis;Akhurst R. J.;J. Gen. Microbiol.,1980

2. Antibiotic activity of Xenorhabdus spp., bacteria symbiotically associated with insect pathogenic nematodes of the families Heterorhabditidae and Steinernematidae;Akhurst R. J.;J. Gen. Microbiol.,1982

3. Phenotypic and DNA relatedness between nematode symbionts and clinical strains of the genus Photorhabdus (Enterobacteriaceae);Akhurst R. J.;Int. J. Syst. Bacteriol.,1996

4. Evidence against the involvement of Mycobacterium ulcerans in most cases of necrotic arachnidism;Atkinson R. K.;Pathology,1995

5. DNA relatedness between Xenorhabdus spp. (Enterobacteriaceae), symbiotic bacteria of entomopathogenic nematodes, and a proposal to transfer Xenorhabdus luminescens to a new genus, Photorhabdus gen. nov;Boemare N. E.;Int. J. Syst. Bacteriol.,1993

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