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Clinical and Diagnostic Laboratory Immunology, January 2005, p. 44-51, Vol. 12, No. 1
1071-412X/05/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/CDLI.12.1.44-51.2005
Copyright © 2005, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Department of Host Defense, Osaka City University Graduate School of Medicine, Abeno-ku,1 Toneyama Institute for Tuberculosis Research, Toyonaka-shi,3 Department of Internal Medicine, Toneyama National Hospital, Toyonaka-shi, Osaka,2 Japan BCG Laboratory, Kiyose-shi, Tokyo, Japan4
Received 6 February 2004/ Returned for modification 20 May 2004/ Accepted 6 October 2004
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In a previous study, we reported the characteristics of an enzyme immunoassay (EIA) for MAC pulmonary diseases with a mixture of glycopeptidolipid (GPL) antigens from 11 reference strains of MAC and applied the assay to serodiagnosis of patients with MAC disease (7). However, there are problems with the transition of the assay from a research tool to widespread clinical use. Specifically, preparation of GPL antigen of consistent quality as well as quantity from 11 reference strains of MAC is both time- and cost-consuming. Identification of a simple and stable antigen for use in serodiagnostic tests for MAC disease is necessary. In addition, the natural history of MAC lung disease is unpredictable in immunocompetent patients. Some patients are resistant to multiple drug chemotherapy and show persistent excretion of MAC organisms and a steady worsening of chest radiographic findings until death. Other patients maintain a stable clinical and radiographic picture for years (1).
We have been investigating the relationship between the serotype of MAC isolates and the long-term survival of patients with pulmonary MAC disease. However, it was difficult to accurately identify the serotypes of clinical isolates with the seroagglutination test and thin-layer chromatography (TLC). The GPLs from different clinical isolates are serologically cross-reactive and have similar Rf values on TLC (17). When we used serodiagnosis to identify antibody serotypes against the different types of GPLs in some pulmonary MAC disease patients, we detected antibody against all 11 GPLs in each serum. We hypothesized that the antibody to the GPL core could be the reactive component in the sera of pulmonary MAC disease patients rather than all patients infected by every MAC serotype. Our hypothesis was supported by analysis of GPLs that shows that the fatty acyl-D-Phe-D-allo-Thr-D-Ala-L-alaninol-O-(3,4-di-O-methyl-Rha), or GPL core, is common to all serotypes (3). Because the GPL core is generally considered nonantigenic, it has received less attention than the serologically active polar GPLs that can be identified by immunoassay.
In the present study, we show that the immunodominant epitope of GPLs is the GPL core antigen and we assessed whether an EIA with GPL core antigen is a useful clinical tool for diagnosis of pulmonary MAC diseases. Because whole GPL antigens are not cross-serotypic, it is necessary to prepare a mixture of GPL antigens from different serotypes of MAC (7). By contrast, GPL core antigen is the dominant epitope and cross-reacts with serum antibodies obtained from patients with MAC disease due to different serotypes of the organisms. We have asked whether EIA serodiagnosis with GPL core antigen could differentiate pulmonary MAC disease from MAC colonization and pulmonary tuberculosis and EIA serodiagnostic results could aid in evaluating the effectiveness of the chemotherapy as well as the timing of the future cessation of treatment.
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TABLE 1. Characteristics of the subjects in a study of EIA for diagnosis of pulmonary MAC diseasea
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Preparation of GPL core antigen. The 11 reference strains of MAC obtained from the American Type Culture Collection were serotypes 1 (ATCC 15769), 4 (ATCC 35767), 6 (ATCC 35773), 7 (ATCC 35847), 8 (ATCC 35771), 9 (ATCC 35774), 12 (ATCC 35762), 13 (ATCC 35768), and 14 (ATCC 35761), 16 (ATCC 13950), and 20 (ATCC 35764) (5). After culture in Middlebrook 7H9 (Difco, Detroit, Mich.) for 3 weeks, mycobacteria were autoclaved and lyophilized. Lyophilized bacteria were extracted with chloroform-methanol. Alkali-stable lipids were applied to a silica gel column (Analtech, Newark, Del.) and GPLs were eluted with methanol-chloroform. The eluted GPLs were purified repeatedly by one-dimensional thin-layer chromatography (TLC) that was developed with chloroform-methanol-distilled water until a single spot was obtained (2, 3, 7). Subsequently reductive ß-elimination of GPL was used to prepare GPL core (11, 15). Briefly, purified GPL was dissolved in ethanol-sodium hydroxide-NaBH4. The reaction mixture was heated, neutralized with acetic acid, and then evaporated. The organic phase was washed, and the resulting GPL core was collected. Both the purity and molecular weight of the GPL core were examined by two-dimensional TLC and by fast atom bombardment-mass spectrometry (FAB-MS) (Jeol, Tokyo, Japan).
EIA. EIA was done with slight modifications of the previously published method (9). Briefly, microtiter plates (Nunc Products, Roskilde, Denmark) were coated with 0.5 µg of GPLs and GPL core of M. avium serotype 4/well. Serum samples were diluted 40-fold with phosphate-buffered saline containing 1% bovine serum albumin. Diluted serum samples were added, followed by incubation for 1 h at 37°C. Plates were washed, then peroxidase-conjugated F(ab')2 of goat antibody against human immunoglobulin G (IgG), IgA, or IgM (Sigma, St. Louis, Mo.) was added, and plates were incubated for 2 h at 37°C. Unbound labeled antibody was removed by washing and the substrate, o-phenylenediamine dihydrochloride (Sigma), was added. Following color development, the optical densities of the wells on the plates were read for absorbance at 492 nm in a reader (model 550, Bio-Rad Laboratories, Tokyo, Japan). To determine the presence of an immunodominant epitope, inhibition of EIA was done by addition of either the mixture of GPL (7) or GPL core antigen at concentrations ranging from 1 to 5 µg/well. All assays were performed in triplicate and without prior knowledge of the clinical status of the patient.
Statistical analyses. All data were analyzed with the statistical analysis software package StatView 5.0 (SAS Institute, Cary, N.C.). Antibody EIA titers in individual patients or patient groups were expressed as the mean ± standard deviation. Further comparisons of data from patient groups were made with analysis of variance and nonparametric analysis. Spearman's correlation coefficient by rank was used to determine the relationship between EIA titers and clinical parameters. The chi-square test was used to determine the relationship between gender and patient group. P < 0.05 was considered significant.
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FIG. 1. One-dimensional (A) and two-dimensional TLC analysis (B to D) of GPLs and GPL core. Three reference strains of MAC were analyzed: serotypes 4 (ATCC 35767, lane 1), 16 (ATCC 13950, lane 2), and 20 (ATCC 35764, lane 3). GPLs were purified repeatedly by one-dimensional (1D) TLC developed with chloroform-methanol-distilled water until a single spot was obtained (A). Subsequently GPLs were ß-eliminated to obtain GPL core, and then the purity of GPL core was examined by two-dimensional (2D) TLC (first in the vertical and second in the horizontal direction. B, serotype 4; C, serotype 16; D, serotype 20).
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FIG. 2. FAB-MS of purified GPL core. GPL core of serotype 4 showed a main peak at an m/z of 1,027, corresponding to the (M-H)- ion in negative-ion mode (A) and an m/z of 1,051 corresponding to the (M+Na)+ in positive-ion mode (B). Based on these results, the molecular weight of GPL core of MAC serotype 4 was calculated to be 1,028.
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FIG. 3. Antibody titers to 11 serotypes of MAC and GPL core antigen in sera from three patients with MAC disease before and after adsorption with GPL core antigen. The serum titers before adsorption are shown in the left panel. After adsorption with 5 µg of GPL core antigen per ml, the titers of GPL antibody were reduced to background levels in most samples, with the exception of patient C, as shown in this figure. The titers of the three serum samples after adsorption are shown in the right panel.
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FIG. 4. Antigen specificity and recognition of an immunodominant epitope for GPLs. GPL core concentrations ranging from 1 to 5 µg/ml were added to the EIA with a mixture of GPLs prepared from 11 reference strains of MAC and GPL core of a serotype 4 strain. Sera were from five patients with MAC pulmonary disease, patient A ( ), patient B (), patient C ( ), patient D ( ), and patient E ( ). Addition of GPL core antigen inhibited the level of optical density (OD) by IgG (panels A and D), IgA (panels B and E), and IgM (panels C and F) antibodies against GPLs (panels A, B, and C) and GPL core (panels D, E, and F) in a dose-dependent fashion.
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TABLE 2. Serum antibodies against GPL core antigen in patients with lung disease
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TABLE 3. Sensitivity and specificity of EIA for serodiagnosis of pulmonary MAC disease
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The mean IgA antibody titers in the cured group significantly decreased after chemotherapy (P < 0.001) but did not change in the treatment failure group (Fig. 5A). In the treatment failure group, a 61-year-old female patient had undergone lobectomy after chemotherapy. Her GPL core IgA antibody titer decreased rapidly after the surgery, and her sputum specimens converted to negative (Fig. 5B). No statistically significant differences were found between the cured and treatment failure groups for age, gender, duration of treatment, and timing of serum collection. Similar results were observed in changes of IgG and IgM antibodies to GPL core antigen before and after chemotherapy in both the cured (P < 0.001: IgG and IgM) and treatment failure groups (IgG, P = 0.25; IgM, P = 0.55).
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FIG. 5. Disease activity and level of antibodies to MAC GPL core. The levels of serum IgA antibodies to GPL core are shown before and after the completion of antimycobacterial chemotherapy for both the cured (14 MAC patients) and the failure groups (13 MAC patients). In the cured group, the culture results indicated conversion from positive to negative after successful chemotherapy, and in the failure group, the culture results indicated no conversion to negative despite treatment. All results are expressed as individual data ( ), and the bars show the mean ± standard deviation for each group. The optical density levels decreased significantly (*, P < 0.001) in the cured group of patients but were not changed (P = 0.381) in the treatment failure group. The changes of serum IgA levels of to GPL core in a 61-year-old female MAC patient who had undergone lobectomy is shown in B. IgA levels decreased rapidly after the surgery, and sputum cultures converted from positive to negative.
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The chemical structure of GPL is composed of a common GPL core, fatty acyl-D-Phe-D-allo-Thr-D-Ala-L-alaninol-O-(3,4-di-O-methyl-Rha), with the different oligosaccharide (polar GPL) moieties linked at the Thr substituent of the core. GPLs are the major cell surface antigens of slowly growing mycobacteria, such as MAC and M. scrofulaceum. There are 31 distinct GPL serotypes. In the present study, we report detection by EIA of an antibody against the purified MAC GPL core in sera of patients with pulmonary MAC disease. The GPL antibody levels were reduced in a dose-dependent fashion when different concentrations of GPL core were incorporated into the EIA. These results show that GPL core, the common component of all GPLs, has an immunodominant epitope in MAC strains. Although the present study has demonstrated that GPL core is the dominant epitope, there is a possibility that other components of GPLs, including oligosaccharide and oligosaccharide-GPL complex and whole GPLs, possess antigenicity. Indeed, serum antibodies to whole GPL antigen were incompletely adsorbed with GPL core with the serum of the patient C (Fig. 3). Serotype-specific antisera were produced from rabbits by repeated immunizations with MAC (14). Thus, both the individual variability of humans and the species specificity in the immune response to antigens should be noted.
The recognition that there was an immunodominant antigenic epitope on the GPL core has minimized some of the problems of antigen preparation from an array of MAC strains. The GPL core based EIA described in this study had both high sensitivity and specificity when used to assay MAC-specific IgG, IgA, and IgM, and results were comparable to those previously obtained with mixtures of GPL antigens from 11 reference strains of MAC (9). It was likely that antibodies against both GPL core and polar GPL were being detected in the EIA when mixtures of GPL antigens were used since the addition of GPL core antigens reduced levels of GPL antibodies without reducing levels of GPL antibodies to serotype-specific oligosaccharide antigens. For the diagnosis of MAC pulmonary disease, the best sensitivity and specificity were obtained by measuring IgA antibodies against GPL core. The values for IgG antibodies against a mixture of GPL antigens were almost the same as IgA antibodies against GPL core. However both the ease and low cost of antigen preparation make the EIA for IgA with GPL core antigen a practical tool. Future studies would also benefit from the standardization of serum samples, as well as the methods for rapid and reliable serodiagnosis of MAC disease.
We previously reported the development of a rapid diagnostic EIA for tuberculosis, which is specific for antibodies to tuberculous glycolipid (9, 10). It was recently reported that the combination of lipoarabinomannan polysaccharide antigen, antigen-60, and tuberculous glycolipid appear to be the best choices as antigens for the serodiagnosis of tuberculosis (12). When we combined the results of three serodiagnostic tests which used lipoarabinomannan, antigen-60 and tuberculous glycolipid as antigens, the nontuberculous mycobacteria patients could not be differentiated serologically from tuberculosis patients because tuberculous glycolipid, lipoarabinomannan polysaccharide, and antigen-60 are common cell wall components of all acid-fast organisms, such as mycobacteria and nocardiae.
Nontuberculous mycobacteria cause a chronic, slowly progressive pulmonary infection resembling tuberculosis in immunocompetent hosts. MAC ranks first and M. kansasii ranks second among causes of human nontuberculous mycobacterial lung disease (6). We have used GPLs as an antigen for the differential serodiagnosis of pulmonary MAC disease and tuberculosis. This is feasible because GPLs are the major cell surface antigens of slowly growing mycobacteria, such as MAC and M. scrofulaceum (3). By contrast, M. kansasii and M. tuberculosis complex, including bacille Calmette-Guérin (BCG), do not have GPLs in their cell walls (3). In this study the low positive rate (Table 3) and low levels of serum GPL core antibodies in M. kansasii and tuberculosis patients confirmed that serodiagnosis by EIA with GPL core antigen could differentiate pulmonary MAC disease from both pulmonary tuberculosis and pulmonary nontuberculous mycobacterial disease caused by M. kansasii. Rapidly growing mycobacteria such as M. chelonae and M. fortuitum also have GPLs as major cell surface components but rarely cause pulmonary nontuberculous mycobacteria disease in humans (6).
MAC organisms are ubiquitous in nature. They have been isolated from water, soil, plants, house dust, and other environmental sources (6) and asymptomatic colonization of human hosts can occur. In this study, GPL core-based EIA could exclude MAC colonization as well as tuberculosis and M. kansasii disease because sera of individuals with MAC colonization have both a low positive rate and low antibody levels (Table 2, Table 3).
Despite the fact that most Japanese people (
90%) have been given BCG (16), the rate of seropositivity for GPL core antibodies in healthy subjects is low (3.2 to 8.7%). One explanation is that GPL core-based EIA for MAC disease is not affected by prior vaccination with BCG, because GPLs are not present in M. tuberculosis complex (3). Although M. tuberculosis complex and M. kansasii do not have GPLs, a low positive rate (Table 3) and low levels of serum GPL antibodies in M. kansasii (6.7 to 16.7%), tuberculosis (5.2 to 10.4%), and healthy subjects (3.2 to 8.7%) could be detected. It is possible that latent subclinical infection with MAC leads to false-positive results since 7 to 12% of adults show evidence of subclinical MAC infection when tested for delayed-type skin reactivity to M. avium sensitin (18).
In our study, we were unable to determine the rate of subclinical infection with MAC because an appropriate test is not yet available in Japan. However, there are several possible explanations for the low levels of antibody against GPL core antigen. First, a low positive rate is directly related to the cutoff values defined by with the ROC curves. Second, subclinical infections with other nontuberculous mycobacteria, such as M. chelonae and/or M. fortuitum, must be excluded because such organisms possess GPL antigens in their cell surface (8), which may induce antibody production in the host. Third, a follow up of this antibody levels in these individuals needs to be done looking for individual variability according to the time. There are several possible explanations for the few false-negative patients (29 for IgG, 8 for IgA, and 23 for IgM); presence of circulating immune complexes, excess of GPL core antigens relative to antibodies, very low bacterial load, and recently diagnosed disease.
By obtaining EIA data before and after successful antimicrobial chemotherapy or surgery, we could demonstrate that the level of GPL core antibodies reflected disease activity of MAC infection. This result is consistent with our previous study on the level of GPL antibodies in MAC disease (7) and show that a merit of the assay is the ability to monitor disease activity. This finding is important because there is, as yet, no consensus as to when to discontinue chemotherapy for MAC disease (1). To validate the use of the EIA as an appropriate clinical tool for monitoring disease and scheduling treatment, data must be obtained in prospective, large-scale studies of active MAC disease.
The high sensitivity and specificity, combined with the simplicity, safety, and rapidity of obtaining results, point to the possibility that new avenues for serodiagnosis of MAC disease will become available with the introduction of the GPL core-based EIA. Results of serodiagnosis by EIA with MAC-specific GPL core antigen, when used in combination with acid-fast staining of sputum and culture confirmation and analyzed together with clinical, radiographic, and microbiologic criteria, may be a powerful tool for diagnosing MAC disease.
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