Detection of naegleria species in environmental samples from peninsular Malaysia

BACKGROUND: In Malaysia, researchers and medical practitioners are unfamiliar with Naegleria infections. Thus little is known about the existence of pathogenic Naegleria fowleri, and the resultant primary amoebic meningoencephalitis (PAM) is seldom included in the differential diagnosis of central...

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Main Authors: Ithoi, I., Ahmad, A.F., Nissapatorn, V., Lau, Y.L., Mahmud, R., Mak, J.W.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science 2011
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Online Access:http://eprints.um.edu.my/2146/1/1.pdf
http://eprints.um.edu.my/2146/
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21915311
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spelling my.um.eprints.21462017-07-04T07:54:30Z http://eprints.um.edu.my/2146/ Detection of naegleria species in environmental samples from peninsular Malaysia Ithoi, I. Ahmad, A.F. Nissapatorn, V. Lau, Y.L. Mahmud, R. Mak, J.W. R Medicine BACKGROUND: In Malaysia, researchers and medical practitioners are unfamiliar with Naegleria infections. Thus little is known about the existence of pathogenic Naegleria fowleri, and the resultant primary amoebic meningoencephalitis (PAM) is seldom included in the differential diagnosis of central nervous system infections. This study was conducted to detect the presence of Naegleria species in various environmental samples. METHODS/FINDINGS: A total of 41 Naegleria-like isolates were isolated from water and dust samples. All these isolates were subjected to PCR using two primer sets designed from the ITS1-ITS2 regions. The N. fowleri species-specific primer set failed to produce the expected amplicon. The Naegleria genus-specific primers produced amplicons of 408 bp (35), 450 bp (2), 457 bp (2) or 381 bp (2) from all 41 isolates isolated from aquatic (33) and dust (8) samples. Analysis of the sequences from 10 representative isolates revealed that amplicons with fragments 408, 450 and 457 bp showed homology with non-pathogenic Naegleria species, and 381 bp showed homology with Vahlkampfia species. These results concurred with the morphological observation that all 39 isolates which exhibited flagella were Naegleria, while 2 isolates (AC7, JN034055 and AC8, JN034056) that did not exhibit flagella were Vahlkampfia species. CONCLUSION: To date, pathogenic species of N. fowleri have not been isolated from Malaysia. All 39 isolates that produced amplicons (408, 450 and 457 bp) from the genus-specific primers were identified as being similar to nonpathogenic Naegleria. Amplicon 408 bp from 5 representative isolates showed 100% and 99.7% identity to Naegleria philippinensis isolate RJTM (AM167890) and is thus believed to be the most common species in our environment. Amplicons 450 bp and 457 bp were respectively believed to be from 2 new species of Naegleria, since representative isolates showed lower homology and had a longer base pair length when compared to the reference species in the Genbank, Naegleria schusteri (AJ566626) and Naegleria laresi (AJ566630), respectively. Public Library of Science 2011 Article PeerReviewed application/pdf en http://eprints.um.edu.my/2146/1/1.pdf Ithoi, I. and Ahmad, A.F. and Nissapatorn, V. and Lau, Y.L. and Mahmud, R. and Mak, J.W. (2011) Detection of naegleria species in environmental samples from peninsular Malaysia. PLoS ONE, 6 (9). ISSN 1932-6203 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21915311 21915311
institution Universiti Malaya
building UM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Malaya
content_source UM Research Repository
url_provider http://eprints.um.edu.my/
language English
topic R Medicine
spellingShingle R Medicine
Ithoi, I.
Ahmad, A.F.
Nissapatorn, V.
Lau, Y.L.
Mahmud, R.
Mak, J.W.
Detection of naegleria species in environmental samples from peninsular Malaysia
description BACKGROUND: In Malaysia, researchers and medical practitioners are unfamiliar with Naegleria infections. Thus little is known about the existence of pathogenic Naegleria fowleri, and the resultant primary amoebic meningoencephalitis (PAM) is seldom included in the differential diagnosis of central nervous system infections. This study was conducted to detect the presence of Naegleria species in various environmental samples. METHODS/FINDINGS: A total of 41 Naegleria-like isolates were isolated from water and dust samples. All these isolates were subjected to PCR using two primer sets designed from the ITS1-ITS2 regions. The N. fowleri species-specific primer set failed to produce the expected amplicon. The Naegleria genus-specific primers produced amplicons of 408 bp (35), 450 bp (2), 457 bp (2) or 381 bp (2) from all 41 isolates isolated from aquatic (33) and dust (8) samples. Analysis of the sequences from 10 representative isolates revealed that amplicons with fragments 408, 450 and 457 bp showed homology with non-pathogenic Naegleria species, and 381 bp showed homology with Vahlkampfia species. These results concurred with the morphological observation that all 39 isolates which exhibited flagella were Naegleria, while 2 isolates (AC7, JN034055 and AC8, JN034056) that did not exhibit flagella were Vahlkampfia species. CONCLUSION: To date, pathogenic species of N. fowleri have not been isolated from Malaysia. All 39 isolates that produced amplicons (408, 450 and 457 bp) from the genus-specific primers were identified as being similar to nonpathogenic Naegleria. Amplicon 408 bp from 5 representative isolates showed 100% and 99.7% identity to Naegleria philippinensis isolate RJTM (AM167890) and is thus believed to be the most common species in our environment. Amplicons 450 bp and 457 bp were respectively believed to be from 2 new species of Naegleria, since representative isolates showed lower homology and had a longer base pair length when compared to the reference species in the Genbank, Naegleria schusteri (AJ566626) and Naegleria laresi (AJ566630), respectively.
format Article
author Ithoi, I.
Ahmad, A.F.
Nissapatorn, V.
Lau, Y.L.
Mahmud, R.
Mak, J.W.
author_facet Ithoi, I.
Ahmad, A.F.
Nissapatorn, V.
Lau, Y.L.
Mahmud, R.
Mak, J.W.
author_sort Ithoi, I.
title Detection of naegleria species in environmental samples from peninsular Malaysia
title_short Detection of naegleria species in environmental samples from peninsular Malaysia
title_full Detection of naegleria species in environmental samples from peninsular Malaysia
title_fullStr Detection of naegleria species in environmental samples from peninsular Malaysia
title_full_unstemmed Detection of naegleria species in environmental samples from peninsular Malaysia
title_sort detection of naegleria species in environmental samples from peninsular malaysia
publisher Public Library of Science
publishDate 2011
url http://eprints.um.edu.my/2146/1/1.pdf
http://eprints.um.edu.my/2146/
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21915311
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