LETTER
Our laboratory in The Gambia, West Africa, performs Koga agar (1.5% bacteriological agar, 0.5% sodium chloride, 0.5% meat extract, 0.1% bacteriological peptone) culture for larvae of strongyle nematodes on human fecal samples for which parasitological investigation has been requested. We have recovered free-living amoebae (FLA) from human fecal specimens on two occasions over a period of 9 months (representing 130 individual fecal cultures) on this agar (Fig. 1). The amoebae in both cases were identified as Hartmannella species based upon the morphology of trophozoites and cysts in agar culture (Fig. 2) and their inability to enflagellate in distilled water after 8 h of incubation at 37°C. No other types of FLA have been recovered. Due to resource constraints, sequencing of the partial 18S rRNA gene and internal transcribed spacer (ITS) region could not be performed, and this identification must remain presumptive. Specimens were collected into sterile containers, and Koga culture plates were sterile and sealed with Parafilm prior to incubation at 30°C for 5 days; therefore, environmental contamination with FLA was very unlikely. Repeat specimens could not be obtained from subjects, and so it was not possible to determine if these findings represent transient passage of FLA or true intestinal colonization.
It has been postulated that FLA provide a vehicle for bacterial pathogens to gain entry into the human respiratory tract (1). The possibility that free-living amoeba may have a similar role in the introduction of bacterial pathogens into the human intestinal tract (and particularly in defense against stomach acid during transit to the duodenum) should be further considered, given these findings. FLA are potential environmental reservoirs of several important pathogens of the human intestinal tract, including Salmonella spp., Shigella spp., Campylobacter spp., and enterohemorrhagic Escherichia coli (2–5). Specifically, due to the large infective dose of Vibrio cholerae (108 to 109 cells), it has been suggested that Acanthamoebae may act as both environmental hosts and intracellular multipliers of this organism, allowing it to grow sufficiently to be able to cause human infection (6).
Human respiratory tract (7, 8) and urinary tract (9) colonization with Acanthamoeba spp. may occur. Recovery of FLA, including Hartmannella spp. from the intestinal tracts of rodents (10), reptiles (11), and fish and birds (12), has been previously reported. Only one previous reference in the literature describes the recovery of FLA from the human intestinal tract (13).
The potential for transient passage or true colonization of the human intestinal tract with FLA may also provide a novel potential portal of entry into the human body for FLA causing primary amoebic meningitis (PAM) and granulomatous amoebic encephalitis (GAE). These findings may also require a review of safety practices when dealing with such cultures, including the use of biosafety cabinets during manipulation of Koga agar cultures to avoid cultures potentially containing Naegleria fowleri being inappropriately manipulated on a benchtop in the laboratory.
In summary, we report the recovery of FLA in Koga agar culture of feces from two separate individuals in West Africa. It is unknown if this represents transient passage or true intestinal colonization. These findings demonstrate an important novel mechanism of entry for bacterial intestinal pathogens and possibly pathogenic FLA themselves into the human body. They also raise the need for awareness of the potential for FLA to be recovered from Koga agar culture in order to ensure the health and safety of laboratory staff performing such cultures.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
This research is jointly funded by the United Kingdom Medical Research Council (MRC; grant MC-A760-5QX00) and the United Kingdom Department for International Development (DFID) under the MRC/DFID Concordat agreement.
Footnotes
Published ahead of print 13 November 2013
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