Identification of Pythium insidiosum by nested PCR in cutaneous lesions of Brazilian horses and rabbits.
Abstract: Pythium insidiosum is a fungus-like organism present in subtropical and tropical areas, such as Brazil, known to infect humans and various animal species. P. insidiosum is the etiological agent of pythiosis, an emerging and granulomatous disease characterized mainly by cutaneous and subcutaneous lesions in horses, the principal species affected. Accurate diagnosis of pythiosis and identification of its causal agent by microbiological and serological tests can be often difficult and inconclusive principally for horses and humans. The aim of this study was to evaluate the application of the previously described P. insidiosum-specific nested polymerase chain reaction (PCR) assay to directly detect P. insidiosum DNA in clinical and experimental lesions. Universal fungal primers (ITS1 and ITS4) were used during the first-round of PCR to amplify ITS1, 5.8s, and ITS2. A second-round of PCR was conducted with P. insidiosum-specific primers (PI1 and PI2) to amplify a variable region within this ITS1. In this study, a total of 21 equine clinical samples (kunkers) and 28 specimens from experimentally infected rabbits were analyzed by nested PCR. The first-round of PCR generated 800-base pair products, and the second-round produced 105-base pair amplicons for each P. insidiosum-specific sample; no amplicons were generated in negative control samples. Our results suggest that nested PCR is an important and efficient tool for diagnosis of both endemic (horse samples) and experimental (rabbit samples) pythiosis.
Publication Date: 2010-12-25 PubMed ID: 21188592DOI: 10.1007/s00284-010-9781-4Google Scholar: Lookup
The Equine Research Bank provides access to a large database of publicly available scientific literature. Inclusion in the Research Bank does not imply endorsement of study methods or findings by Mad Barn.
- Evaluation Study
- Journal Article
- Research Support
- Non-U.S. Gov't
Summary
This research summary has been generated with artificial intelligence and may contain errors and omissions. Refer to the original study to confirm details provided. Submit correction.
This study examines the use of nested polymerase chain reaction as a means to identify Pythium insidiosum in cutaneous lesions of horses and rabbits. Pythium insidiosum, typically found in subtropical and tropical areas, is a fungus-like organism and the cause of pythiosis, a disease characterized by cutaneous and subcutaneous lesions primarily in horses.
Introduction
The research focuses on Pythium insidiosum, a pathogen that causes pythiosis in animals and humans. Although horses are the majorly affected species, the disease can also infect humans, making its detection and identification significant for both veterinary and medical science.
Challenge in Conventional Detection
- Traditional diagnostic methods for pythiosis, including microbiological and serological tests, often yield inconclusive results, particularly for horses and humans. This poses a significant challenge for the effective treatment and control of the disease.
Methodology
- The study employs a previously established nested polymerase chain reaction (PCR) assay, a molecular biology technique used to amplify a desired piece of DNA. The method was applied directly to clinical and experimental samples to detect P. insidiosum DNA.
- Researchers used universal fungal primers during the first round of PCR and P. insidiosum-specific primers during the second round to select and amplify the target DNA.
- A total of 49 samples, involving 21 clinical samples from horses and 28 from experimentally infected rabbits, were analysed using this method.
Results
- The first round of PCR resulted in 800-base pair products, while the second round created smaller, 105-base pair amplicons specific to P. insidiosum.
- No amplicons were found in negative control samples, validating the specificity of the nested PCR strategy.
- The successful amplification of P. insidiosum DNA in both clinical equine samples and experimental rabbit samples shows that the nested PCR method is effective at identifying this pathogen.
Conclusion
- Based on these findings, the research concludes that nested PCR is a powerful and efficient tool in diagnosing pythiosis, both in endemic cases (as seen in the horse samples) and experimental cases (as encountered in rabbit samples).
Implication
- The research implies that the use of nested PCR for diagnosing pythiosis could lead to more effective treatment and control of the disease. Furthermore, the method could potentially be expanded to detect other pathogens in future studies.
Cite This Article
APA
Botton SA, Pereira DI, Costa MM, Azevedo MI, Argenta JS, Jesus FP, Alves SH, Santurio JM.
(2010).
Identification of Pythium insidiosum by nested PCR in cutaneous lesions of Brazilian horses and rabbits.
Curr Microbiol, 62(4), 1225-1229.
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00284-010-9781-4 Publication
Researcher Affiliations
- Laboratório de Pesquisas Micológicas, Departamento de Microbiologia e Parasitologia, Centro de Ciências da Saúde, Universidade Federal de Santa Maria, Campus Universitário, Prédio 20, Sala 4139, Santa Maria, RS 97105-900, Brazil.
MeSH Terms
- Animals
- Brazil
- Horse Diseases / diagnosis
- Horse Diseases / microbiology
- Horses
- Polymerase Chain Reaction / methods
- Pythiosis / microbiology
- Pythiosis / veterinary
- Pythium / genetics
- Pythium / isolation & purification
- Rabbits
References
This article includes 16 references
- Miller RI, Campbell RS. Immunological studies on equine phycomycosis.. Aust Vet J 1982 Jun;58(6):227-31.
- Mendoza L, Kaufman L, Standard PG. Immunodiffusion test for diagnosing and monitoring pythiosis in horses.. J Clin Microbiol 1986 May;23(5):813-6.
- Supabandhu J, Fisher MC, Mendoza L, Vanittanakom N. Isolation and identification of the human pathogen Pythium insidiosum from environmental samples collected in Thai agricultural areas.. Med Mycol 2008 Feb;46(1):41-52.
- Zhang D, Yang Y, Castlebury LA, Cerniglia CE. A method for the large scale isolation of high transformation efficiency fungal genomic DNA.. FEMS Microbiol Lett 1996 Dec 1;145(2):261-5.
- Grooters AM, Gee MK. Development of a nested polymerase chain reaction assay for the detection and identification of Pythium insidiosum.. J Vet Intern Med 2002 Mar-Apr;16(2):147-52.
- Miller RI, Campbell RS. Experimental pythiosis in rabbits.. Sabouraudia 1983 Dec;21(4):331-41.
- Santurio JM, Leal AT, Leal AB, Festugatto R, Lubeck I, Sallis ES, Copetti MV, Alves SH, Ferreiro L. Three types of immunotherapics against pythiosis insidiosi developed and evaluated.. Vaccine 2003 Jun 2;21(19-20):2535-40.
- Bosco Sde M, Reis GM, Theodoro RC, Macoris SA, Marques SA, Macoris Dda G, Bagagli E. Morphological and molecular characterization of an equine isolate of Pythium insidiosum and comparison with the first human isolate from the same geographic region.. Med Mycol 2008 Sep;46(6):557-65.
- Mendoza L, Kaufman L, Mandy W, Glass R. Serodiagnosis of human and animal pythiosis using an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay.. Clin Diagn Lab Immunol 1997 Nov;4(6):715-8.
- Schurko A, Mendoza L, de Cock AW, Klassen GR. Evidence for geographic clusters: Molecular genetic differences among strains of Pythium insidiosum from Asia, Australia and the Americas are explored.. Mycologia 2003 Mar-Apr;95(2):200-8.
- Mendoza L, Kaufman L, Standard P. Antigenic relationship between the animal and human pathogen Pythium insidiosum and nonpathogenic Pythium species.. J Clin Microbiol 1987 Nov;25(11):2159-62.
- Villa NO, Kageyama K, Asano T, Suga H. Phylogenetic relationships of Pythium and Phytophthora species based on ITS rDNA, cytochrome oxidase II and beta-tubulin gene sequences.. Mycologia 2006 May-Jun;98(3):410-22.
- Schurko AM, Mendoza L, de Cock AW, Bedard JE, Klassen GR. Development of a species-specific probe for Pythium insidiosum and the diagnosis of pythiosis.. J Clin Microbiol 2004 Jun;42(6):2411-8.
- Znajda NR, Grooters AM, Marsella R. PCR-based detection of Pythium and Lagendium DNA in frozen and ethanol-fixed animal tissues.. Vet Dermatol 2002 Aug;13(4):187-94.
- Pesavento PA, Barr B, Riggs SM, Eigenheer AL, Pamma R, Walker RL. Cutaneous pythiosis in a nestling white-faced ibis.. Vet Pathol 2008 Jul;45(4):538-41.
- Mendoza L, Nicholson V, Prescott JF. Immunoblot analysis of the humoral immune response to Pythium insidiosum in horses with pythiosis.. J Clin Microbiol 1992 Nov;30(11):2980-3.
Citations
This article has been cited 23 times.- Sridapan T, Krajaejun T. Nucleic Acid-Based Detection of Pythium insidiosum: A Systematic Review. J Fungi (Basel) 2022 Dec 23;9(1).
- Ulsenheimer BC, von Laer AE, Tonin AA, Campos AAS, Dos Santos HF, Sangioni LA, de Avila Botton S. Leptospira interrogans in bats in Rio Grande do Sul State, Brazil: epidemiologic aspects and phylogeny. Braz J Microbiol 2022 Dec;53(4):2233-2240.
- Elshafie NO, Hanlon J, Malkawi M, Sayedahmed EE, Guptill LF, Jones-Hall YL, Santos AP. Nested PCR Detection of Pythium sp. from Formalin-Fixed, Paraffin-Embedded Canine Tissue Sections. Vet Sci 2022 Aug 19;9(8).
- Chechi JL, Rotchanapreeda T, da Paz GS, Prado AC, Oliveira AL, Vieira JCS, Buzalaf MAR, Rodrigues AM, Santos LDD, Krajaejun T, Bosco SMG. Prospecting Biomarkers for Diagnostic and Therapeutic Approaches in Pythiosis. J Fungi (Basel) 2021 May 28;7(6).
- Loreto ES, Tondolo JSM, de Jesus FPK, Verdi CM, Weiblen C, de Azevedo MI, Kommers GD, Santurio JM, Zanette RA, Alves SH. Efficacy of Azithromycin and Miltefosine in Experimental Systemic Pythiosis in Immunosuppressed Mice. Antimicrob Agents Chemother 2019 Jan;63(1).
- Krajaejun T, Rujirawat T, Kanpanleuk T, Santanirand P, Lohnoo T, Yingyong W, Kumsang Y, Sae-Chew P, Kittichotirat W, Patumcharoenpol P. Biochemical and genetic analyses of the oomycete Pythium insidiosum provide new insights into clinical identification and urease-based evolution of metabolism-related traits. PeerJ 2018;6:e4821.
- Loreto ES, Tondolo JSM, Oliveira DC, Santurio JM, Alves SH. In Vitro Activities of Miltefosine and Antibacterial Agents from the Macrolide, Oxazolidinone, and Pleuromutilin Classes against Pythium insidiosum and Pythium aphanidermatum. Antimicrob Agents Chemother 2018 Mar;62(3).
- Tondolo JSM, Loreto ÉS, Ledur PC, Jesus FPK, Silva TM, Kommers GD, Alves SH, Santurio JM. Chemically induced disseminated pythiosis in BALB/c mice: A new experimental model for Pythium insidiosum infection. PLoS One 2017;12(5):e0177868.
- Konradt G, Bassuino DM, Bianchi MV, Castro L, Caprioli RA, Pavarini SP, Santurio JM, Azevedo MI, Jesus FP, Driemeier D. Cutaneous Pythiosis in calves: An epidemiologic, pathologic, serologic and molecular characterization. Med Mycol Case Rep 2016 Dec;14:24-26.
- He H, Liu H, Chen X, Wu J, He M, Zhong X. Diagnosis and Treatment of Pythium Insidiosum Corneal Ulcer in a Chinese Child: A Case Report and Literature Review. Am J Case Rep 2016 Dec 27;17:982-988.
- Itaqui SR, Verdi CM, Tondolo JS, da Luz TS, Alves SH, Santurio JM, Loreto ÉS. In Vitro Synergism between Azithromycin or Terbinafine and Topical Antimicrobial Agents against Pythium insidiosum. Antimicrob Agents Chemother 2016 Aug;60(8):5023-5.
- Inkomlue R, Larbcharoensub N, Karnsombut P, Lerksuthirat T, Aroonroch R, Lohnoo T, Yingyong W, Santanirand P, Sansopha L, Krajaejun T. Development of an Anti-Elicitin Antibody-Based Immunohistochemical Assay for Diagnosis of Pythiosis. J Clin Microbiol 2016 Jan;54(1):43-8.
- Jesus FP, Loreto ÉS, Ferreiro L, Alves SH, Driemeier D, Souza SO, França RT, Lopes ST, Pilotto MB, Ludwig A, Azevedo MI, Ribeiro TC, Tondolo JS, Santurio JM. In Vitro and In Vivo Antimicrobial Activities of Minocycline in Combination with Azithromycin, Clarithromycin, or Tigecycline against Pythium insidiosum. Antimicrob Agents Chemother 2016 Jan;60(1):87-91.
- Farmer AR, Murray CK, Driscoll IR, Wickes BL, Wiederhold N, Sutton DA, Sanders C, Mende K, Enniss B, Feig J, Ganesan A, Rini EA, Vento TJ. Combat-Related Pythium aphanidermatum Invasive Wound Infection: Case Report and Discussion of Utility of Molecular Diagnostics. J Clin Microbiol 2015 Jun;53(6):1968-75.
- Loreto ES, Tondolo JS, Pilotto MB, Alves SH, Santurio JM. New insights into the in vitro susceptibility of Pythium insidiosum. Antimicrob Agents Chemother 2014 Dec;58(12):7534-7.
- Jesus FP, Ferreiro L, Loreto ÉS, Pilotto MB, Ludwig A, Bizzi K, Tondolo JS, Zanette RA, Alves SH, Santurio JM. In vitro synergism observed with azithromycin, clarithromycin, minocycline, or tigecycline in association with antifungal agents against Pythium insidiosum. Antimicrob Agents Chemother 2014 Sep;58(9):5621-5.
- Fonseca AO, Botton Sde A, Nogueira CE, Corrêa BF, Silveira Jde S, de Azevedo MI, Maroneze BP, Santurio JM, Pereira DI. In vitro reproduction of the life cycle of Pythium insidiosum from kunkers' equine and their role in the epidemiology of pythiosis. Mycopathologia 2014 Feb;177(1-2):123-7.
- Thongsri Y, Wonglakorn L, Chaiprasert A, Svobodova L, Hamal P, Pakarasang M, Prariyachatigul C. Evaluation for the clinical diagnosis of Pythium insidiosum using a single-tube nested PCR. Mycopathologia 2013 Dec;176(5-6):369-76.
- Salas Y, Márquez A, Canelón J, Perazzo Y, Colmenárez V, López JA. Equine pythiosis: report in crossed bred (Criole Venezuelan) horses. Mycopathologia 2012 Dec;174(5-6):511-7.
- Salipante SJ, Hoogestraat DR, SenGupta DJ, Murphey D, Panayides K, Hamilton E, Castañeda-Sánchez I, Kennedy J, Monsaas PW, Mendoza L, Stephens K, Dunn JJ, Cookson BT. Molecular diagnosis of subcutaneous Pythium insidiosum infection by use of PCR screening and DNA sequencing. J Clin Microbiol 2012 Apr;50(4):1480-3.
- Santos CE, Marques LC, Zanette RA, Jesus FP, Santurio JM. Does immunotherapy protect equines from reinfection by the oomycete Pythium insidiosum?. Clin Vaccine Immunol 2011 Aug;18(8):1397-9.
- Vasconcelos AB, França DA, Prado ACD, Yamauchi DH, Silva ACAD, Barros IO, Valença SRFA, Lucheis SB, Bosco SMG. Molecular Detection of Pythium insidiosum in Cutaneous Lesions of Horses from Northeastern Brazil. Animals (Basel) 2025 Sep 30;15(19).
- Ulsenheimer BC, Tonin AA, von Laer AE, Dos Santos HF, Sangioni LA, Fighera R, Dos Santos MY, Brayer DI, de Avila Botton S. Leptospira borgptersenii and Leptospira interrogans identified in wild mammals in Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil. Braz J Microbiol 2024 Jun;55(2):1941-1948.
Use Nutrition Calculator
Check if your horse's diet meets their nutrition requirements with our easy-to-use tool Check your horse's diet with our easy-to-use tool
Talk to a Nutritionist
Discuss your horse's feeding plan with our experts over a free phone consultation Discuss your horse's diet over a phone consultation
Submit Diet Evaluation
Get a customized feeding plan for your horse formulated by our equine nutritionists Get a custom feeding plan formulated by our nutritionists