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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, February 1998, p. 548-551, Vol. 36, No. 2
0095-1137/98/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1998, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Molecular Approaches to Diagnosis of Pulmonary Diseases Due to
Mycoplasma pneumoniae
Marianne
Abele-Horn,1,*
Ulrich
Busch,1
Hans
Nitschko,1
Enno
Jacobs,2
Ralph
Bax,3
Friederike
Pfaff,1
Beatrix
Schaffer,1 and
Jürgen
Heesemann1
Max von Pettenkofer-Institute,
Ludwig-Maximilians-University, 80336 Munich,1
Institute for Microbiology, Technical University, 01307 Dresden,2 and
Childrens Hospital
Munich-Schwabing, Technical University, 80404 Munich,3 Germany
Received 12 May 1997/Returned for modification 5 August
1997/Accepted 4 November 1997
 |
ABSTRACT |
In this prospective study, the use of a culture-enhanced PCR assay
for the detection of Mycoplasma pneumoniae,
followed by hybridization with a specific probe (MP-HPCR) or without
hybridization (MP-PCR), and the use of a nested PCR (MP-NPCR) were
evaluated. Clinical samples (190 specimens) from 190 patients with
respiratory complaints were incubated in culture broth overnight and
then subjected to PCR. The results of the PCR were compared to those obtained by culture, the direct antigen test, and serologic testing by
microparticle agglutination and by immunoblotting in unclear cases. The
sensitivities were 19 CFU for MP-PCR, 1.9 CFU for MP-HPCR, and
0.019 CFU for MP-NPCR. PCR amplification of the
-globin gene was
possible in 98% of cases: after dilution of the
-globin-negative samples, all samples were reactive. Correlation between negative MP-NPCR results and negative serology results was found in 89% of
cases; a positive correlation was found with 10% of the patients. Samples from three immunocompromised patients were MP-NPCR positive but serologically negative. High respiratory colonization by
M. pneumoniae (>105 CFU/ml) in patients with
acute respiratory disease could be detected by culture, MP-PCR, and
MP-NPCR. These results indicate that MP-PCR and MP-NPCR are
reliable methods for the detection of M. pneumoniae in
respiratory tract samples of patients with respiratory complaints.
 |
INTRODUCTION |
Mycoplasma pneumoniae is
a common respiratory tract pathogen causing pharyngitis,
tracheobronchitis, or pneumonia (5). At present, laboratory
diagnosis of M. pneumoniae infections relies on conventional
serological methods. The complement fixation test is the most widely
used method for M. pneumoniae antibody detection but lacks
specificity due to cross-reactivity of the antigen preparations. The
commercially available microparticle agglutination test (MAG test)
and the enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) are more specific and
sensitive, but they require paired sera for diagnosis (13).
A recently developed Western immunoblot technique for the P1 antigen,
which is a major virulence factor of M. pneumoniae, has high
specificity and sensitivity and allows discrimination between
colonization with less-virulent P1 protein-negative M. pneumoniae cells and colonization with virulent P1
protein-positive M. pneumoniae strains, but it is offered by
only a few laboratories (14).
Culture methods are relatively insensitive and time-consuming,
requiring up to 3 weeks for signal detection (15).
More-rapid tests such as the direct antigen assay (4, 16) or
hybridization with specific DNA probes (24) have good
specificities but low sensitivity. Recently developed PCR techniques
(2, 6, 12, 18, 22) show high specificity and sensitivity.
Detection of the amplification product is usually performed by
hybridization with a specific probe, which is very time-consuming
(18).
A rapid alternative method for sensitive detection of M. pneumoniae DNA is a two-step PCR (nested PCR) (NPCR). In this
prospective study, we evaluated the use of direct M. pneumoniae PCR with hybridization (MP-HPCR) or without
hybridization (MP-PCR) and M. pneumoniae NPCR (MP-NPCR) to
detect M. pneumoniae in 190 clinical samples obtained from
190 patients. The results were compared with those obtained by culture,
the direct antigen test, and serological testing, including Western
immunoblotting, for about 20% of the samples obtained from patients
with severe problems.
 |
MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Patients.
Clinical specimens were routinely obtained from
patients admitted with acute respiratory complaints to the Department
of Internal Medicine of the Ludwig-Maximilians-University of Munich or
to the Children's Hospital Munich-Schwabing. One hundred ninety
patients were divided into three groups according to their clinical
status: group I (n = 90) consisted of immunocompromised
patients with respiratory complaints after organ or bone marrow
transplantation (mean age, 25 ± 5.0 years), group II
(n = 50) were adults with acute respiratory tract
disease (mean age, 44 ± 12.6 years), and group III
(n = 50) comprised children with lower respiratory
tract infections (mean age, 8 ± 4.3 years). A total of 190 samples (50 tracheal aspirates and 140 nasopharyngeal aspirates)
obtained in 2 ml of Hayflick broth as the transport medium were
examined. Samples of acute-phase sera were taken 1 day and 5 to 7 days
after the onset of disease, and samples of convalescent-phase sera were taken 20 to 30 days after the onset of disease in a follow-up visit.
Cultures.
From each specimen, a 0.2-ml volume was inoculated
into 1.8 ml of Hayflick broth with glucose (7) and 0.02 ml
was cultured onto Hayflick agar plates (37°C, 5% CO2)
and incubated for 3 weeks. Colonies on plates were identified by
indirect immunofluorescence (23), and positive broths were
verified by various methods: subculture onto agar plates, a direct
antigen test (0.2 ml) (Virion, Würzburg, Germany), and detection
of glass-adherent M. pneumoniae cells by phase-contrast
microscopy (4). For quantitative determination, five 10-fold
dilutions (5 × 0.2 ml in 0.8 ml of Hayflick broth) were prepared,
0.02 ml of each dilution was cultured onto a Hayflick agar plate,
colonies were identified and counted, and the number of CFU/ml was
calculated.
For PCR, 0.2 ml of each specimen was incubated in 3.8 ml of Hayflick
broth overnight, 0.25 ml of this dilution was extracted, and a 5-µl
volume was subjected to MP-PCR the next morning. MP-PCR-negative samples were subjected to MP-NPCR by using 5 µl of a 1:10 dilution of
MP-PCR product. To evaluate the specificity of MP-NPCR, M. genitalium G37c, M. salivarium A889, M. orale T519, and 80 bacterial strains cultured from clinical
specimens were subjected to MP-PCR, MP-HPCR, and MP-NPCR. For
evaluation of the sensitivity, the reference strain M. pneumoniae FH was used.
Direct antigen test.
The direct antigen test, a
species-specific capture ELISA for direct detection of M. pneumoniae antigen (Virion), is based on monoclonal antibodies
directed to the P1 protein (8). The test was performed by
using 0.2 ml of Hayflick broth within 4 h after it changed color
to yellow according to the manufacturer's recommendations.
DNA extraction.
To compare the efficacies of DNA extraction
by cell lysis with proteinase K without further nucleic acid
purification and of DNA extraction after lysis by phenol-chloroform
followed by ethanol precipitation, a 10-fold dilution series of
M. pneumoniae FH ranging from 10
1 to
10
6 CFU/ml was prepared and 0.25 ml of each dilution was
subjected to both extraction methods.
For DNA extraction by proteinase K treatment, samples were prepared as
described for ureaplasmas by other authors (1, 3). Briefly,
250 µl of each diluted sample was centrifuged (12,000 × g for 20 min at 4°C). The pellet was resuspended in 50 µl of solution A (10 mM Tris-HCl, pH 8.3, containing 100 mM KCl and 2.5 mM MgCl2) and an equal volume of solution B (solution A
supplemented with 1% Tween 20, 1% Triton X-100, and 5 mg of
proteinase K per ml). After incubation for 1 h at 60°C and
heating to 95°C for 10 min, a 5-µl volume was used for PCR. In the
second extraction protocol, 0.3 ml of phenol was added after
proteinase K treatment and extraction was continued as described by
other authors (23). Finally, a 5-µl volume was used for
PCR. For clinical samples (0.25 ml), only the first extraction method
was used and a 5-µl volume was subjected to PCR.
PCR.
Prior to M. pneumoniae amplification, each
DNA sample was tested for its ability to be amplified with
-globin-specific primers KM 38 and KM 39 (21). A positive
signal was defined by a 262-bp fragment visualized on an ethidium
bromide-stained agarose gel. Negative samples were diluted (1:50 with
sterile water), and
-globin PCR was repeated. One hundred samples
(50 tracheal and 50 nasopharyngeal aspirates) were tested directly from
specimens and, in parallel, from culture-enhanced overnight samples,
and for the remaining 90 specimens only culture-enhanced overnight
samples were used. Primer set MP-1 (5'-GAA GCT TAT GGT ACA GGT
TGG-3') and MP-2 (5'-ATT ACC ATC CTT GTT GTA AGG-3')
(MWG, Biotech, Ebersberg, Germany) was used for M. pneumoniae-specific amplification as described by Bernet et al.
(2). The reaction volumes for the first and second rounds of
amplification were 50 µl with 0.1 µM (each) primer, 200 µM (each)
deoxynucleoside triphosphate, buffer, and 1 U of AmpliTaq polymerase
(Perker-Elmer Cetus). Amplification was carried out for 40 cycles, each
consisting of 20 s at 95°C, 2 min at 63°C, and 1 min at
72°C. For MP-NPCR, primers MUH-1 (5'-TGA CTG GAA GGA TGT TAA
GC-3') and MUH-2 (5'-TTG TAA TCG TCT TTA TTT CG-3') (MWG, Biotech) were used. Nested amplification was performed by using 5 µl of 1:10-diluted PCR product (5 µl in 45 µl of sterile water) from the first round of amplification under otherwise identical conditions. Positive controls (reference strain M. pneumoniae FH) and negative controls (Hayflick broth, sterile
water, master mix, human DNA, and DNA from reference strains M. orale T519, M. salivarium A889, and M. genitalium G37c) were prepared, extracted, and amplified under
identical conditions. For MP-NPCR of clinical samples, every fourth
sample consisted of a negative control to control cross-contamination.
Hayflick broth, which was extracted and subjected to MP-PCR and then to
MP-NPCR, served as the negative control. As a positive control for each
run, reference strain M. pneumoniae FH was used. The
amplified product of the first PCR was a 144-bp DNA fragment of the
M. pneumoniae ATPase operon gene (11); the
amplicon from the nested PCR had a size of 104 bp (Fig.
1). Both PCR products were analyzed by
using 3% agarose gels containing ethidium bromide, initially
identified by direct sequence analysis, and subsequently identified by
the sizes of the amplicons.

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FIG. 1.
Sensitivities of single-step PCR (MP-PCR) (A) and NPCR
(MP-NPCR) (B) for M. pneumoniae. Lanes: 1 and 12, size
markers; 2, 10 1 dilution of M. pneumoniae FH
reference strain; 3, 10 2 dilution; 4, 10 3
dilution; 5, 10 5 dilution; 6, 10 7 dilution;
7, 10 9 dilution; 8, negative control. Lanes 9, 10, and 11 were empty.
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|
Southern blot analysis of PCR products.
Ten-microliter
volumes of the PCR products were analyzed on 3% agarose gels. DNA was
transferred from the agarose gel to a nylon membrane (Boehringer
Mannheim Biochemica, Mannheim, Germany) by standard methods. The
internal detection oligonucleotide was labeled with digoxigenin by
using commercially available kits (Boehringer Mannheim Biochemica). DNA
hybrids were revealed by chemiluminescence (CSPD; Boehringer Mannheim
Biochemica).
Serology.
Determination of M. pneumoniae-specific
antibodies was performed by using a commercial MAG assay (Serodia-Myco
II Kit; Fujirebio, Tokyo, Japan) according to the manufacturer's
recommendations. An antibody titer of
1:40 was regarded as indicating
a negative result. A fourfold rise in titers of paired sera and titers
of
1:160 were considered positive results. For all positive titers (about 20%) without a fourfold rise, titers between 1:40 and 1:160, and negative titers from samples from patients for whom PCR was positive, results were confirmed by a Western immunoblot technique as
described by Jacobs et al. (14).
 |
RESULTS |
Comparison of MP-NPCR with MP-HPCR and MP-PCR.
The sensitivity
of the PCR method was tested by using serial dilutions (1:10) of
chromosomal M. pneumoniae DNA. Under optimal conditions,
primers MP5-1 and MP5-2 (first-step PCR, MP-PCR) detected about 3,000 genome copies, 30 pg of DNA, 19 CFU, or 1.9 × 103
organisms. Sensitivity was increased to 300 genome copies, 3 pg of DNA,
1.9 CFU, or 190 organisms after hybridization (MP-HPCR) and up to 3 to
10 genome copies, 30 to 100 fg of DNA, 0.019 CFU, or 19 organisms by
MP-NPCR with primers MUH-1 and MUH-2 (1 CFU = 160 genome copies
according to Harris et al. [10] and 1 CFU = 10 to
1,000 organisms according to Razin [19]). There was no
amplification of human DNA or DNA from M. salivarium,
M. orale, and M. genitalium, confirming the
specificity of the primer set MP5-1 and MP5-2 as described by Bernet et
al. (2) and of the primer set MUH-1 and MUH-2. In addition,
none of the 80 samples containing bacteria other than mycoplasmas was
positive by PCR (data not shown). The use of phenol-chloroform-purified
DNA was time-consuming and led to a 10-fold decrease in sensitivity.
Therefore, we extracted DNA from clinical samples only by cell lysis
with proteinase K followed by incubation of the samples at 95°C for 10 min (1, 3).
PCR of clinical samples versus culture and serology.
Internal
inhibition of the PCR was controlled for 100 specimens and the
corresponding overnight cultures by amplification of a 262-bp
-globin gene fragment. Ten of the undiluted specimens (five tracheal
aspirates and five nasopharyngeal aspirates), but only one of the
overnight cultures, were initially
-globin PCR negative but yielded
a positive signal after dilution (1:50 in sterile water). Consequently,
PCR for the remaining half of the samples was performed solely with
overnight cultures, and only two specimens (2%) were initially
-globin PCR negative.
In order to avoid false-positive results (19), we routinely
coamplified samples known to be negative (Hayflick broth only) in large
numbers (25% of all samples in every run). MP-NPCR was considered
valid when all negative controls were negative in both rounds of PCR.
Specimens giving false-positive results, which were obtained with about
0.5% of all samples, were retested and only included when the repeated
control tests were all negative.
Among the 190 patients, 20 (11%) were found to be positive by MP-NPCR,
16 (8%) were found to be positive by MP-HPCR, and 15 (8%) were
positive by MP-PCR. M. pneumoniae was detected in 8 patients
(4%) by culture and in 11 patients (6%) by the direct antigen test.
In addition, 17 patients (9%) were confirmed to be serologically
positive by the MAG test or by immunoblot (Table 1).
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TABLE 1.
Correlation among results obtained by amplification of
M. pneumoniae DNA, culture, direct antigen test, and
serology (immunoblot)
|
|
Corresponding negative serology and MP-NPCR results were obtained for
170 patients (89%), and corresponding positive results were obtained
for 17 patients (10%) (Table 2); with
respect to culture, serology, and MP-NPCR, corresponding negative
results were obtained for 170 patients (89%) and corresponding
positive results were obtained for only 8 patients (4%; data not shown in Table 2).
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TABLE 2.
Correlation between results obtained by amplification
of M. pneumoniae DNA (NPCR and PCR) and
serology (immunoblot)
|
|
Besides being tested for M. pneumoniae, all patients were
also tested for other respiratory pathogens. Thirty percent of the patients in group I were positive for one of the following:
Legionella pneumophila (two patients), Streptococcus
pneumoniae (three patients), Haemophilus influenzae
(three patients), Aspergillus fumigatus (two
patients), Pneumocystis carinii (three patients),
cytomegalovirus (nine patients), and Herpes simplex
virus (five patients). In group II, 32% had either
Staphylococcus aureus (two patients), S. pneumoniae (eight patients), H. influenzae (five
patients), or Klebsiella pneumoniae (one patient). In group
III, 32% were positive for one of the following: S. aureus
(one patient), S. pneumoniae (one patient), H. influenzae (three patients), Moraxella catarrhalis (two
patients), Herpes simplex virus (one patient), and Respiratory
syncytial virus (eight patients).
 |
DISCUSSION |
The prospective study reported here describes the use of PCR
(MP-PCR) and NPCR (MP-NPCR) for rapid diagnosis of M. pneumoniae infections. It differs from other studies in several
points. First, the PCR procedure is performed not directly on the
specimens but on culture-enhanced Hayflick broth, into which specimens
are inoculated immediately after reception and incubated overnight. By
this step, PCR-inhibitory substances, which were initially observed in
10% of the specimens as demonstrated by a directly performed
-globin PCR, are diluted and internal inhibition is reduced to 2%,
a rate which is clearly lower than those described by other authors
(18, 20, 22, 23).
As a second modification, preparation of samples was simplified by
replacing the time-consuming phenol-chloroform extraction by treatment
with proteinase K (1, 3). This proved to be a fast method
which did not result in loss of DNA (23). For detection of
low concentrations of mycoplasmas, two-step PCR (MP-NPCR) was used
instead of a time-consuming hybridization protocol (2 versus 4 days).
By this method, the detection limit ranges from 3 to 10 genome copies,
30 to 100 fg of DNA, or 0.019 CFU. Sensitivity is 10-fold better than
that for single-step PCR followed by hybridization and exceeds that for
antigen capture enzyme immunoassay or culture by 104- to
105-fold.
However, increase in sensitivity was accompanied by an enhanced risk of
contamination and false-positive MP-NPCR results. In preliminary assays
(data not shown), contamination, detected by positive results after the
second amplification step with randomly incorporated negative samples,
probably caused by carryover (12), occurred in 10% of all
samples. By strictly following the guidelines for the general handling
of the PCR procedure (17), such as separation of rooms,
boards, and lab benches, we minimized contamination to 0.5% in this
study. Another approach to establishing a more sensitive test is to
examine genes that occur in multiple copies, such as rRNA genes
(23, 24). Such a protocol may also provide greater
sensitivity, without the additional work and enhanced risk of
contamination associated with NPCR. However, a disadvantage of this
method is the need for purification of RNA, making it less suitable for
routine procedures (12).
In this study, the best correlation between culture, serology, and PCR
results was observed among patients with current infections of the
lower respiratory tract (groups II and III). In accordance with data
reported in other publications (19), these patients revealed
high respiratory colonization levels (>105 CFU/ml) and,
therefore, a high probability for positive culture, antigen detection
(2), and positive immune response by microparticle agglutination. The difficulty is not in the detection of mycoplasmas but in the reliable confirmation of a rapid diagnosis, which is important for early and adequate antibiotic therapy. Consequently, due
to its short detection time of 2 days, MP-PCR should be preferentially used. An ultrasensitive test like MP-NPCR is not necessary.
In contrast, among immunocompromised patients interpretation of
positive NPCR results was, with exception of one case, more difficult.
In the one exception, the patient had a manifest mycoplasma infection
associated with positive PCR results (MP-NPCR, MP-HPCR, and MP-PCR), a
positive antigen assay, and a good antibody response by the MAG assay.
The other five patients with a positive MP-NPCR result gave negative
results by culture and had no serological response by the MAG test. Two
of them had had M. pneumoniae infections 9 months previously
(elevated antibody titer of >1:160). They revealed a weak
immunoglobulin G (IgG) response by immunoblot at admission, but
single-step PCRs (MP-HPCR and MP-PCR) were negative. This might reflect
a recent mycoplasma infection with persistence of a very low
concentration of M. pneumoniae DNA in the respiratory tract.
The differences between positive results by MP-NPCR and negative
serology for the remaining three patients may be explained in several
ways: first, false-positive PCR results; second, lack of immunological
response in immunocompromised patients (22); third,
persistence of mycoplasmas after a recent infection (24); and fourth, a mild infection without immunological response. The possibility of false-positive PCR results seems very unlikely, because
PCR was positive in two independent assays which were performed
separately from daily diagnostic assays and in different rooms, with
all possible precautions being taken. The hypothesis of the presence of
seronegative immunocompromised patients could be more relevant
(22); however, we could not distinguish whether PCR detected
a mild acute infection, a carrier state (9), or the
persistence of mycoplasmas in the respiratory tract after a recent
infection (24).
Among children with acute respiratory infections in group III,
diagnosis was easy, except for those who were treated with erythromycin. In these cases, cultures and MAG assays with acute-phase sera gave negative results (antibody titer, <1:160) and there was not
a fourfold increase in convalescent-phase sera; only immunoblots revealed weak IgG and often strong IgA or IgM responses. These cases
demonstrate the limitation of conventional serology and confirm the
necessity of more-specific assays such as the immunoblot. Additionally,
the use of more-sensitive nucleic acid tests like NPCR may be helpful.
During the period studied, the incidence of M. pneumoniae
(11%) was in accordance with that described in other publications (12) but differed considerably among age groups and types of clinical disease. Whereas respiratory syncytial virus is more prevalent
in very young children, M. pneumoniae infections occur predominantly in older children or in young adults. Among the elderly,
typical respiratory pathogens such as pneumococci or H. influenzae are more frequently isolated, and among
immunocompromised patients, endogenous microorganisms are prominent.
In conclusion, conventional PCR and two-step PCR (NPCR) performed
with culture-enhanced overnight samples proved to be reliable methods for detecting M. pneumoniae rapidly and specifically
in clinical specimens. For routine diagnosis of acute respiratory disease we prefer conventional serology, culture, and conventional PCR
without hybridization. For pretreated or immunocompromised patients,
the more sensitive two-step PCR (NPCR) method and immunoblotting may be
helpful.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Max von
Pettenkofer-Institute, Ludwig-Maximilians-University,
Pettenkoferstrasse 9a, 80336 Munich, Germany. Phone:
49-89-5160-5245. Fax: 49-89-64 270 288. E-mail:
08964270286-0001{at}t-online.de.
 |
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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, February 1998, p. 548-551, Vol. 36, No. 2
0095-1137/98/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1998, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
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