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Sequence Analysis of Toxin Gene–Bearing Corynebacterium diphtheriae Strains, Australia - Volume 23, Number 1—January 2017 - Emerging Infectious Disease journal - CDC

Sequence Analysis of Toxin Gene–Bearing Corynebacterium diphtheriae Strains, Australia - Volume 23, Number 1—January 2017 - Emerging Infectious Disease journal - CDC

Volume 23, Number 1—January 2017

Dispatch

Sequence Analysis of Toxin Gene–Bearing Corynebacterium diphtheriae Strains, Australia

Christine J. DoyleComments to Author , Adam Mazins, Rikki M.A. Graham, Ning-Xia Fang, Helen V. Smith, and Amy V. Jennison
Author affiliations: Queensland Health Forensic and Scientific Services, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia (C.J. Doyle, R.M.A. Graham, N.-X. Fang, H.V. Smith, A.V. Jennison)Griffith University, Brisbane (A. Mazins)

Abstract

By conducting a molecular characterization of Corynebacterium diphtheriae strains in Australia, we identified novel sequences, nonfunctional toxin genes, and 5 recent cases of toxigenic cutaneous diphtheria. These findings highlight the importance of extrapharyngeal infections for toxin gene–bearing (functional or not) and non–toxin gene–bearing C. diphtheriae strains. Continued surveillance is recommended.
Pharyngeal diphtheria caused by toxigenic Corynebacterium diphtheriae is well-controlled in Australia due to a vaccine administered as part of the national immunization program. Rare cases of cutaneous and pharyngeal diphtheria have been reported in the country; however, the disease remains endemic in other regions of the world, and the potential for cases among travelers and their contacts remains (14). Historical data suggest that cutaneous diphtheria could be more contagious than respiratory diphtheria because environmental contamination from the skin is more common (5).
Detection of diphtheria toxin genes in either C. ulcerans or C. diphtheriae is notifiable in Queensland, regardless of the site of infection (6). Extrapharyngeal disease, such as cutaneous infection or endocarditis, caused by either toxigenic or nontoxigenic strains can be clinically notable, however, and is not prevented by vaccination (4). Our reference laboratory (Queensland Health Forensic and Scientific Services, Brisbane) receives isolates of C. diphtheriae and C. ulcerans from clinical laboratories in Queensland and surrounding areas for toxin gene testing. PCR is used to test for the presence of the toxin gene, which encodes for both subunits of the AB exotoxin. However, the functionality of the gene is not routinely examined (7,8). Previous studies in the United Kingdom and Russia have reported nonsense mutations in the toxin gene; those strains are described as nontoxigenic toxin gene–bearing (NTTB) (9,10). We aimed to identify potential mutations in the toxin gene in a selection of isolates in Australia, as well as describe the recent epidemiology of C. diphtheriae isolations in the local area after the annual number of isolates referred to the laboratory had increased 10-fold from 2012 (n = 9) through 2015 (n = 108).
During the 2-year period from July 1, 2013, until June 30, 2015, a total of 136 isolates of C. diphtheriae were referred to our laboratory for toxin gene screening; these isolates included 2 that were second isolations from patients, 2 and 3 months after the initial specimens were collected. Primary identification by diagnostic referring laboratories was confirmed by the presence of dtxR (11). We did not determine patient vaccination status, biotype of isolates, presence of co-infecting organisms, and antimicrobial susceptibility and treatment as part of this study.
Of the 136 isolates we received, 129 (95%) were from cutaneous wound swab specimens; 93 (72%) of 129 wounds were located on the lower limbs. Six isolates were respiratory system–associated, including 1 from the ear swab specimen of a patient with otitis media. Four isolates, including 1 nontoxigenic isolate from a blood culture, were from hospitalized patients, with the remainder presumed not to be. How this systemic case developed clinically is unknown. In most cases (71%), travel history or evidence on how the infection was acquired was not provided; however, when such information was given, tropical travel locations and injuries involving seawater or coral were typically noted. Isolates were collected from patients in both urban and rural areas.
Five of the 136 isolates had both A and B subunits of diphtheria toxin (tox), detected by multiplex PCR, all of which appeared to be functional by sequence analysis (7). These 5 isolates were obtained from lower limb wound specimens from patients with a history of travel in a tropical travel area. Whole-genome sequencing with the Ion Torrent platform (Life Technologies, Grand Island, NY, USA) was performed on the 5 isolates with toxin genes detected by PCR and 1 historical isolate. We de novo assembled reads in Geneious R7 (Biomatters, Auckland, New Zealand) and used Ridom Seqsphere+ (Ridom GmbH, G Würzburg, Germany) to extrapolate in silico multilocus sequence typing (MLST) results and the sequences of diphtheria toxin repressor (dtxR) gene and tox genes. We also sequenced and analyzed the tox genes of an additional 8 historical C. diphtheriae isolates from our culture collection using methods described (9,12). MLST results for 3 historical isolates known to be related to each other were determined as described (13).
We analyzed a total of 14 tox-positive isolates (Table). All of those with MLST results had unique sequence types, except for the 3 known linked historical isolates. Novel sequences for dtxR and tox were submitted to GenBank (accession nos. KU869770–5). The novel dtxR sequences contained silent mutations and the novel frame-shift, missense, and/or nonsense mutations of the novel tox sequences. We predicted that 2 historical isolates would have nonfunctional tox genes, with single nucleotide deletions at positions 55 and 226 in fragment A, causing frame-shift mutations and premature stop codons at aa 38 and aa 92, respectively. These strains were isolated in 2006 or earlier and are considered to be NTTB strains. One of these strains has previously been reported as toxigenic; however, tox functionality was not assessed in that study by either sequence analysis or Elek testing (14).
The introduction of matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometry as a routine identification tool in clinical microbiology laboratories has likely been a factor responsible for the continued increase in referral of isolates to our laboratory in recent years, possibly in addition to increased awareness after the fatal case of respiratory diphtheria in Australia in 2011. The 5 recent cases of functional toxin gene–bearing cutaneous C. diphtheriae infection more likely reflect an increase in testing cutaneous isolates rather than a true increase in incidence. Extrapharyngeal infections, particularly cutaneous, with both toxigenic and nontoxigenic strains are more common in this geographic region than is classical pharyngeal diphtheria, and their incidence is likely to have been historically underestimated. Repeat isolates from the same patient months after previous isolation reflect the chronic nature of cutaneous infection. This observation is also supported by most patients receiving care through outpatient settings. Any difference in the severity of disease caused by strains included this study is unknown, although we presume that functional toxin gene–bearing strains cause more severe disease.
Because of the theoretical possibility that NTTB stains and non–toxin gene–bearing strains could gain functional toxin expression by spontaneous mutation reversion or homologous recombination between different corynebacteriophages, these strains should be considered tox gene reservoirs (9). These strains also can cause systemic infections, as the blood culture isolate included in this study demonstrates. The genetic variation among the 5 recent functional toxin gene–bearing isolates indicates the absence of a particular circulating clone in the area. We recommend continued surveillance of C. diphtheriae and identification of NTTB strains.
Ms. Doyle is a scientist with the Molecular Epidemiology Unit of the Public Health Microbiology Laboratory, Queensland Health Forensic and Scientific Services, Brisbane, Australia, specializing in the molecular typing of notifiable bacterial pathogens for public health surveillance and outbreak investigations.

Acknowledgments

We thank all laboratories that referred isolates for inclusion in this study, particularly the Centre for Infectious Diseases and Microbiology, Institute of Clinical Pathology and Medical Research, Westmead Hospital, New South Wales, Australia, for providing historical isolates. We also thank all Public Health Units involved in case investigations and John Savill for establishing the toxin gene detection test in our laboratory.
We used the C. diphtheriae MLST website (http://pubmlst.org/cdiphtheriae) developed by Keith Jolley and sited at the University of Oxford. The development of this site has been funded by the Wellcome Trust.

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Table

Cite This Article
DOI: 10.3201/eid2301.160584

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