To the Editors:
Progress made to improve laboratory capacity for tuberculosis (TB) diagnosis led to the development of molecular assays that are now replacing conventional microscopy and culture-based methods on a large scale [1, 2]. Unfortunately, current molecular techniques detect both live and dead bacteria, and a positive result does not imply the viability of the pathogen. Indeed, DNA can persist for a long period after bacterial death and nucleic acid from dead bacteria is equally amplifiable. Therefore, molecular assays are unsuitable for treatment monitoring and/or for infection control purposes.
We report an innovative approach to selectively amplify DNA derived from viable Mycobacterium tuberculosis in clinical specimens, which is useful for monitoring mycobacterial load in pulmonary TB patients during anti-TB treatment.
The protocol is based on pre-treatment of samples with propidium monoazide (PMA; Biotium Inc., Hayward, CA, USA), a chemical compound that can intercalate the DNA of non-viable (or membrane-damaged) organisms but is excluded from viable bacteria. After light activation, PMA binds covalently to the DNA, preventing its amplification by PCR [3]. After light exposure, unbound PMA is not able to interact further with DNA molecules.
The assay was first optimised using acid-fast bacilli (AFB)-negative sputum samples spiked with dead or live mycobacteria at different concentrations. In brief, live Mycobacterium fortuitum cells were added to N-acetyl-cysteine decontaminated sputum specimens negative for AFB by smear microscopy at a final concentration of 106 bacteria·mL−1. An aliquot of this laboratory-made sample was treated to heat kill the M. fortuitum cells. PMA stock solution was prepared and stored at -20°C and protected from light exposure, until use, as recommended by the manufacturers. PMA was added as a pre-treatment at a final concentration of 500 μM and incubated for 30 min at 4°C in the dark, followed by light exposure to blue light-emitting diode (LED)-active light (GenIUL, Terrassa, Spain) for 15 min at room temperature. DNA was then extracted using a standard phenol chloroform procedure. As a control to evaluate the efficacy of the light exposure step, an aliquot of naked DNA extracted from an M. fortuitum culture was treated with 500 μM PMA previously exposed to the LED light for 15 min. The commercial line-probe assay (GenoType® Mycobacterium CM; Hain Lifescience, Nehren, Germany) was then performed in order to identify clinically relevant mycobacterial species [4]. Samples containing live M. fortuitum showed a normal hybridisation profile on a nitrocellulose strip, whereas samples treated to kill bacteria did not show any amplification, except for the internal control (data not shown). Since naked DNA treated with light-inactivated PMA showed a normal hybridisation profile, the light exposure step was efficient and the PCR was not further inhibited by residual PMA.
Having optimised the protocol for the inactivation of DNA derived from dead bacteria, we adapted it to the Xpert® MTB/RIF automated assay (Cepheid, Sunnyvale, CA, USA). The real-time PCR performed by the Xpert® MTB/RIF provides threshold cycles (Ct) that can be used to calculate the difference in amplification yield between samples with and without PMA pre-treatment (ΔCt): a low ΔCt indicates the presence of amplifiable DNA from live bacteria, whereas a high ΔCt indicates that target DNA in the sample originated from dead or damaged bacteria and, therefore, PMA pre-treatment significantly affects its amplification. To calculate the ΔCt value we considered the mean between the Ct values provided for each probe included in the Xpert® MTB/RIF test (A to E) [5].
We tested the PMA protocol using the Xpert® MTB/RIF assay on a Ct calibration curve of AFB-negative clinical specimens with heat-killed/live mycobacteria added in different ratios. High dead–live ratios resulted in a maximal difference in ΔCt values between heat-treated and live portions with PMA, whereas samples containing a similar percentage of killed and live bacteria could not be differentiated from one another by the use of PMA pre-treatment (data not shown). Similar data have been reported by Kralik et al. [6].
Finally, we tested the approach on clinical specimens. 10 patients diagnosed with active pulmonary TB (sputum smear positive and culture positive) were included in the first validation study. Samples were collected at the time of diagnosis (t0) and after 10–20 days of therapy (t1), N-acetyl-cysteine decontaminated and processed for MGIT-960 liquid culture (BD Diagnostic Systems, Sparks, MD, USA) according to international guidelines [7]. All patients were still AFB-positive by sputum smear microscopy at t1. In parallel, 250 μL of decontaminated samples were processed for molecular analysis by Xpert® MTB/RIF assay with and without PMA pre-treatment. Samples were then processed as recommended by the manufacturer's instructions for the Xpert® MTB/RIF assay.
As shown in figure 1, PMA did not significantly affect PCR yield of specimens collected at t0 (mean±sem ΔCt 2.3±0.5), whereas specimens collected during therapy at t1 showed a ΔCt of 10.5±0.9 after PMA treatment (p=0.0003) confirming that the sputum smear positivity of these samples was mostly due to highly damaged bacteria. Moreover, ΔCt calculated between t0 and t1 in PMA-untreated samples was found to be too low (ΔCt 2.9±0.9) to appreciate a real decrease in bacterial load due to the therapy.
Two patients rated “low” at t0 by the Xpert® showed a negative culture at t1, whereas all the other patients rated “medium” or “high” remained culture positive by MGIT. Although an exact time to positivity cannot be assessed, we observed that cultures from samples collected at t1 became positive approximately 7–10 days later compared with cultures from samples collected at t0, suggesting a severe reduction in the live bacterial load.
All patients were successfully treated and cured at the end of therapy, and this was consistent with the reduction of live bacteria detected by the PMA assay.
As a negative control, we retrospectively also included a treatment failure case (AFB positive and culture positive after 5 months of standard treatment). In this case, PMA pre-treatment of both decontaminated sputum specimens collected at 1 month and two during treatment did not significantly affect PCR yield (ΔCt ∼2), thus supporting inefficacy of anti-TB treatment.
The same protocol should, in principle, be compatible with other CE-approved molecular tests and line probe assays endorsed by the World Health Organization for the diagnosis of TB; further studies are needed to rule out this possibility.
Previous studies [3, 6] have demonstrated the possibility of using PMA to distinguish between live and dead mycobacteria using a concentration of 25–50 μM. During protocol set up, a final concentration of 100 μM fully avoided amplification of DNA derived from heat-killed M. fortuitum; a weak background due to the amplification of DNA from heat-killed M. tuberculosis was observed (data not shown). We can speculate that the different cell wall composition somehow affects the capacity of PMA to penetrate damaged mycobacteria. Indeed, Kralik et al. [6] observed that the PMA-induced signal reduction between live and dead Mycobacterium avium subsp. paratuberculosis were lower compared with those found for other bacterial species. In addition, considering the amount of debris that could potentially sequester PMA molecules in decontaminated sputa, we increased the final concentration to 500 μM. Further studies evaluating differences of PMA treatment effect on strains showing different cell wall composition (e.g. Beijing strains) and/or in sputa with different characteristics (e.g. blood-containing sputum) could better elucidate the usefulness of this test in different clinical settings.
According to LØvdal et al. [8], a small proportion of cells presumed to be dead or heavily injured are not able to grow. The presence of a small number of cells that are heavily injured but non-culturable could explain why we still have a positive signal in samples collected at t1 despite the PMA pre-treatment. PMA pre-treatment does not avoid the detection of a small proportion of dead cells (false positive for a viability assay): the test might, therefore, overestimate viable mycobacteria. However, from a clinical perspective, this would represent a minor error compared with the risk (very small for this test) of underestimating viable mycobacteria.
Our data indicate, for the first time, that quantitative molecular techniques combined with the PMA method could be an alternative to direct microscopy and culture for monitoring early treatment response and for preliminary evaluation of personalised regimens. The use of this assay can allow earlier evaluation of treatment efficacy, showing a clear decrease in the vital mycobacterial load. However, the absence of the response to therapy might also be promptly identified by the test allowing a regimen change and limiting the spread of infection and further resistance development [9].
Footnotes
Support Statement
The research leading to these results has received funding from the European Community's Seventh Framework Programme (FP7/2007-2013) under grant agreement FP7-223681 awarded to D.M. Cirillo.
Statement of Interest
None declared.
- ©ERS 2012