Characterization of Leptospira isolates from humans and the environment in Uruguay

Authors

  • Paulina Meny Universidad de la República
  • Clara Menéndez Universidad de la República
  • Jair Quintero Universidad de la República
  • Elba Hernández Universidad de la República
  • Cristina Ríos Universidad de la República
  • Ilana Teruszkin Balassiano Instituto Osvaldo Cruz; Centro de Referência Nacional para Leptospirose; WHO Collaborating Center for Leptospirosis, Laboratório de Zoonoses Bacterianas
  • Camilla Nunes Dos Reis Trindade Instituto Osvaldo Cruz; Centro de Referência Nacional para Leptospirose; WHO Collaborating Center for Leptospirosis, Laboratório de Zoonoses Bacterianas
  • Juliana Magalhães Vital-Brazil Instituto Osvaldo Cruz; Centro de Referência Nacional para Leptospirose; WHO Collaborating Center for Leptospirosis, Laboratório de Zoonoses Bacterianas
  • Tatiane Mendes Varela Ramos Instituto Osvaldo Cruz; Centro de Referência Nacional para Leptospirose; WHO Collaborating Center for Leptospirosis, Laboratório de Zoonoses Bacterianas
  • Natalia Ashfield Universidad de la República
  • Camila Feble Universidad de la República
  • Esthefani Avila Universidad de la República
  • Felipe Schelotto Universidad de la República
  • Gustavo Varela Universidad de la República

Keywords:

Leptospira, Human isolates, MLVA-VNTR-PCR, Leptospirosis, Environment Leptospira, Leptospira interrogans, Leptospira kirschneri, L. meyeri

Abstract

Laboratory diagnosis of human leptospirosis usually relies on indirect methods exploring specific immune response. Isolation and identification of the involved strains are cumbersome, but can provide biological resources for pathogenic studies and relevant information for guiding prevention and control measures. The aim of the research we are hereby reporting was the characterization of Leptospira isolates obtained from humans and the environment in Uruguay. Blood cultures were performed from early samples of 302 Uruguayan patients, mainly rural workers, and from 36 water samples taken from their living or working environments. Eight human isolates and seven environmental isolates were obtained and analyzed by end point Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR), Multilocus Variable Number of Tandem Repeat Analysis (MLVA) and other molecular methods. Human isolates corresponded to several serogroups and serovars of Leptospira interrogans and Leptospira kirschneri species, probably reflecting the infection with similar involved Leptospira species and serovars of an extended animal reservoir in rural settings of the country, mostly dedicated to meat and dairy production. Culture-positive patients were older than usually affected workers, and presented signs and symptoms of severe illness. A high organic and circulating bacterial burden may explain an easier positive result from these workers’ samples. Environmental isolates were mainly identified as Leptospira biflexa strains, with a single L. meyeri isolate of uncertain significance.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Downloads

Published

2017-01-01

Issue

Section

Original Articles

How to Cite

Meny, P., Menéndez, C., Quintero, J., Hernández, E., Ríos, C., Balassiano, I. T., Trindade, C. N. D. R., Vital-Brazil, J. M., Ramos, T. M. V., Ashfield, N., Feble, C., Avila, E., Schelotto, F., & Varela, G. (2017). Characterization of Leptospira isolates from humans and the environment in Uruguay. Revista Do Instituto De Medicina Tropical De São Paulo, 59, e79. https://revistas.usp.br/rimtsp/article/view/143752