| Literature DB >> 29250041 |
Anthony A Adegoke1,2,3, Thor A Stenström1, Anthony I Okoh2,3.
Abstract
Stenotrophomonas maltophilia is a commensal and an emerging pathogen earlier noted in broad-spectrum life threatening infections among the vulnerable, but more recently as a pathogen in immunocompetent individuals. The bacteria are consistently being implicated in necrotizing otitis, cutaneous infections including soft tissue infection and keratitis, endocarditis, meningitis, acute respiratory tract infection (RTI), bacteraemia (with/without hematological malignancies), tropical pyomyositis, cystic fibrosis, septic arthritis, among others. S. maltophilia is also an environmental bacteria occurring in water, rhizospheres, as part of the animals' microflora, in foods, and several other microbiota. This review highlights clinical reports on S. maltophilia both as an opportunistic and as true pathogen. Also, biofilm formation as well as quorum sensing, extracellular enzymes, flagella, pili/fimbriae, small colony variant, other virulence or virulence-associated factors, the antibiotic resistance factors, and their implications are considered. Low outer membrane permeability, natural MDR efflux systems, and/or resistance genes, resistance mechanisms like the production of two inducible chromosomally encoded β-lactamases, and lack of carefully compiled patient history are factors that pose great challenges to the S. maltophilia control arsenals. The fluoroquinolone, some tetracycline derivatives and trimethoprim-sulphamethaxole (TMP-SMX) were reported as effective antibiotics with good therapeutic outcome. However, TMP-SMX resistance and allergies to sulfa together with high toxicity of fluoroquinolone are notable setbacks. S. maltophilia's production and sustenance of biofilm by quorum sensing enhance their virulence, resistance to antibiotics and gene transfer, making quorum quenching an imperative step in Stenotrophomonas control. Incorporating several other proven approaches like bioengineered bacteriophage therapy, Epigallocatechin-3-gallate (EGCG), essential oil, nanoemulsions, and use of cationic compounds are promising alternatives which can be incorporated in Stenotrophomonas control arsenal.Entities:
Keywords: Stenotrophomonas maltophilia; phage therapy; quorum quenching; resistance genes; sulfa
Year: 2017 PMID: 29250041 PMCID: PMC5714879 DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2017.02276
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Microbiol ISSN: 1664-302X Impact factor: 5.640
Biochemical/growth characteristics of S. maltophilia.
| Growth without NaCl | Carbon utilization source | Adonitol | ||
| Growth with NaCl (1.5 and 3.0%) | Arabinose | |||
| Growth at 4°C | Adipate | |||
| Growth at 42°C | Amygdalin | |||
| Catalase | Mannose | |||
| Oxidase | Mannitol | |||
| Methionine as growth requirement | Caprate | |||
| Optimum growth temp of 35°C | Citrate | |||
| Hydrolysis of esculin | N-acetyl-glucosamine | |||
| Hydrolysis of gelatin | Fructose | |||
| Fermentation of glucose | Galactose | |||
| Motility | Gluconate | |||
| Nitrate reduction | ||||
| Lysine decarboxylase | Inositol | |||
| Arginine dihydrolase | Melobiose | |||
| Ornithine decarboxylase | Maltose | |||
| Tryptophane desaminase | Lactose | |||
| β-galactosidase | Trehalose | |||
| Methyl red | Tween 80 hydrolysis | |||
| Voges-Proskauer reaction | DNase production | |||
| H2S production | Starch hydrolysis | |||
| Urea hydrolysis | ||||
| Phenylamine deaminase | “Acid production from maltose” | |||
| “Acid production from glucose” | ||||
−means negative reaction or no growth; + means positive reaction or growth; +/− means variable reactions.
Stenotrophomonas maltophilia as commensal in environment and etiological agent.
| Butternut roots' | Adegoke and Okoh, | Necrotizing otitis | Borner et al., | |
| Potato roots | Dawam et al., | Cutaneous infections | Smeets et al., | |
| Grass roots | Adegoke and Okoh, | Endocarditis | Kim et al., | |
| Maize roots | Pereira et al., | Meningitis | Platsouka et al., | |
| Rice roots | Zhu et al., | Soft tissue infection | Sakhnini et al., | |
| Medicago roots | Shen et al., | Keratitis | Arora et al., | |
| Wheat roots | Majeed et al., | Acute respiratory tract infection | Pathmanathan and Waterer, | |
| Sunflower roots | Ambrosini et al., | Bacteraemia (usually with/without Hematological malignancies) | Labarca et al., | |
| Water and wastewater | Municipal | Chang et al., | Tropical pyomyositis | Thomas et al., |
| Cystic fibrosis | Talmaciu et al., | |||
| Microfiltered water dispensers | Sacchetti et al., | |||
| River water | Nakatsu et al., | Intestinal colonization resulting in diarrhea | Apisarnthanarak et al., | |
| Saline subterranean Lake | Rivas et al., | |||
| Septic arthritis | Aydemir et al., | |||
| Showerheads | Feazel et al., | |||
| Drinking water | Simões et al., | Endocarditis | Takigawa et al., | |
Figure 1Various niches in environment and clinical settings as reservoir for S. maltophilia and unique attributes.
Figure 2S. maltophilia: (A) Infected digital ulcer of the second and third fingers of the right hand (Trignano et al., 2014); (B) Small colonies (indicated by red dashed circle) and big colonies cultivated on agar plates containing high concentrations of ampicillin (600 μg/mL) (Abda et al., 2015); (C) Characterization of flagella Produced by Clinical Strains of S. maltophilia by scanning electron microscope (de Oliveira-Garcia et al., 2002); (D) Scanning electron micrograph of a S. maltophilia biofilm grown at 30°C for 24 h in a flow cell (Briandet et al., 2008); (E) Transmission electron microscopy images of Vermamoeba vermiformis infected by S. maltophilia (Cateau et al., 2014); (F) Colored transmission electron micrograph (TEM) of S. maltophilia (Science Photo Library).
Virulence and virulence associated factors in S. maltophilia and its potential application in diagnosis/therapy.
| Biofilm | Iron-restrictive regulation to slow done biofilm formation and reduce spread | Di Bonaventura et al., | ||
| Quorum sensing | “Diffusible Signal Factor (DSF) quorum sensing (QS) system to” | “Mediate intra- and inter-specific signaling and regulate virulence-related processes” | Quorum quenching therapeutic approach by incorporating the structural analogs of DSF and other factors | Tay and Yew, |
| Extracellular enzymes | “DNase, RNase, arbutinase, protease (StmPr1 serine protease) acetase, esterases, lipases, mucinase, acid and alkaline phosphatases, hyaluronidase, phosphoamidase, elactase, leucine arylamidase, and β-glucosidase” | Synthesis of a Structural analogs of DSF to block extracellular enzymes production & other virulence factors | Crossman et al., | |
| Flagella | Sequence identity to the flagellin of | Anti-Flagella antibodies | Zgair and Chhibber, | |
| Pili/fimbriae | “Fimbrillar structures (5–7 μm in width) just like pili interconnecting bacteria and mediating adhesion of the bacteria to the abiotic surface” | “Specific antibodies against SMF-1 fimbriae inhibited the agglutination of animal erythrocytes, adherence to HEp-2 cells and biofilm formation by | de Oliveira-Garcia et al., | |
| Small colony variant | Down-regulation of the bacterial electron transport and/or dihydrofolate reductase (DHFR) pathway sulfamethoxazole resistance, bringing about small colonial form | Switch to the SCV phenotype is a response to antibiotic pressure due to down-regulation of the bacterial electron transport and/or dihydrofolate reductase (DHFR) pathway | “SCV | Anderson et al., |
Indicates particular concern.
Zone diameter and Minimal Inhibitory Concentration (MIC) interpretive standards for Stenotrophomonas maltophilia (M100-S24, Clinical and Laboratory Standards Institute, 2014).
| B | Ticarcillin-clavulanate | – | – | – | – | ≤16/2 | 32/2–64/2 | ≥128/2 |
| B | Ceftazidime | – | – | – | – | ≤8 | 16 | ≥32 |
| B | Minocycline | 30 μg | ≥19 | 15–18 | ≤14 | ≤4 | 8 | ≥16 |
| B | Levofloxacin | 5 μg | ≥17 | 14–16 | ≤13 | ≤2 | 4 | ≥8 |
| A | Trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole | 1.25/23.75 μg | ≥16 | 11–15 | ≤10 | ≤2/38 | – | ≥4/76 |
| B | Chloramphenicol | – | – | – | – | ≤8 | 16 | ≥32 |
Not routinely reported on isolates from the urinary tract.
Figure 3Multiple antibiotic resistant profile of S. maltophilia from root rhizosphere (Adegoke and Okoh, 2015).
Some of the resistance genes acquired/reserved in S. maltophilia.
| Beta lactamase production | Beta lactam antibiotics | Zhang et al., | ||
| Beta lactamase production | Beta lactam antibiotics | Zhang et al., | ||
| Sulphonamide hydrolases' production | Sulphonamides/trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole | Toleman et al., | ||
| Sulphonamide hydrolases' production | Sulphonamides/trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole | Toleman et al., | ||
| Sulphonamide hydrolases' production | Sulphonamides/trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole | Wang Y. L. et al., | ||
| “ | Efflux pump (RND based) | Ciprofloxacin/floroquinolone, tetracycline | Li et al., | |
| Meropenem, chloramphenicol | Alonso and Martínez, | |||
| Undetermined | Crossman et al., | |||
| Tetracycline, aminoglycosides, ciprofloxacin | Crossman et al., | |||
| Undetermined | Crossman et al., | |||
| Aminoglycosides, macrolides, doxycline, some quinolone | Lin et al., | |||
| quinolone | García-León et al., | |||
| Aminoglycosides | Gould et al., | |||
| Smqnr | Penta-peptide repeat protein | Quinolone | Sánchez and Martínez, | |
| Bacterial topoisomerase and gyrase genes | Chromosomal mutations of the quinolone resistance–determining regions in DNA gyrase and DNA topoisomerase IV | Quinolone and fluoroquinolone | Jia et al., | |
| Phosphoglucomutase | ceftazidime, gentamicin, nalidixic acid, piperacillin-tazobactam, polymyxin B, polymyxin E, ticarcillin-clavulanic acid, vancomycin | Liaw et al., | ||
Some phages for potential treatment of multiple antibiotic resistant S. maltophilia.
| DLP1 | Exhibits unique plaque development | Red Deer River sediment | Wide range | Peters et al., |
| DLP2 | Phage DLP2 is larger than DLP1. It has a non-contractile tail (≈205 nm; capsid size ≈70 nm in diameter) | soil planted with blue flax | Wide range | Peters et al., |
| Maltocin P28 | “It appears like a contractile but non-flexible phage tail (phage remnant) structure based on electron microscopy” | Due to the sequence analysis similar to P2 phage genome, it might have multiple host range | Liu et al., | |
| Smp131 | Morphology resembles the members of myoviridae (genome size ≈250) | Clinical samples | Narrow host range | Lee et al., |
| phiSMA5 | Morphology resembles the members of myoviridae (genome size ≈160 kb) | clinical samples | Narrow range | Lee et al., |
| ϕSHP1 | Filamentous phage | Environmental samples | SMP1 specific | Liu et al., |