After
spending more than 8 years in clinical microbiology with special reference to
parasitology, I’ve come to realise that it truly is a bug’s life! Use of nucleic acid-based
methods such as PCR in routine clinical microbiology diagnostic labs have revealed
that single-celled parasites are colonising the intestine of up to 50% of the
Danish population! And so what? Well, this finding has several implications.
Our results reveal that faecal-oral transmission is much more common in Denmark - a highly industrialised country where drinking water comes from waterworks (i.e. no surface water supplies), where outbreaks even due to bacteria are scarce, and where authorities spend 1.2 billion DKK on food safety and control. Today, 90% of dwellings in Denmark (5.6m citizens) are connected to efficient sewage systems, and Denmark has more than 1,400 treatment plants to purify wastewater from households, businesses and institutions. But somewhere the chain pops off… Even in Denmark it is “bugs galore”, which means that faecal exposure is much more common that we would probably like to think. Intestinal protists (primarily Blastocystis and Dientamoeba) are telltales of exposure to faecal contamination and faecal-oral transmission.
Stensvold CR, Lebbad M, & Clark CG (2012). Last of the human protists: the phylogeny and genetic diversity of Iodamoeba. Molecular biology and evolution, 29 (1), 39-42 PMID: 21940643
A couple of
months ago I revisited Why it is a
bugs life by Jörg
Blech (The Guardian (2002)). Speaking of numbers, - I
wonder which one is the most successful eukaryote in terms of numbers? Blastocystis? Dientamoeba? Or any other “Parasite
sp.”? After realising that microscopy methods allow us to see only the very tip
of the iceberg and after adding PCR to our routine diagnostics, we have found a
few examples of “novel” parasitic species and many more may be in store for us.
Morphologically identical organisms, such as those belonging to Iodamoeba bütschlii, may be found in both human and non-human hosts and may differ
genetically across the nucelar small subunit rRNA gene by up to more than 30%! This is quite astonishing given the fact that the difference between human and murine small subunit rDNA is about 1%! Since these
data have been established only recently, obviously no one knows the respective
clinical significance of these morphologically similar but genetically very different lineages, and further studies may
reveal differences in pathogenicity as seen in other amoebic genera. Blastocystis and Entamoeba coli are somewhat similar examples.
Our results reveal that faecal-oral transmission is much more common in Denmark - a highly industrialised country where drinking water comes from waterworks (i.e. no surface water supplies), where outbreaks even due to bacteria are scarce, and where authorities spend 1.2 billion DKK on food safety and control. Today, 90% of dwellings in Denmark (5.6m citizens) are connected to efficient sewage systems, and Denmark has more than 1,400 treatment plants to purify wastewater from households, businesses and institutions. But somewhere the chain pops off… Even in Denmark it is “bugs galore”, which means that faecal exposure is much more common that we would probably like to think. Intestinal protists (primarily Blastocystis and Dientamoeba) are telltales of exposure to faecal contamination and faecal-oral transmission.
In Denmark, 90% of dwellings are connected to efficient sewage systems, and the country has more than 1,400 treatment plants. |
However, we
might also learn to see these parasites as other types of indicators. In our
experience Danish patients with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) represent a
cohort of people whose gut flora is remarkably different from that of other
cohorts (patients with irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) and patients with
non-IBD/non-IBS diarrhoea): Apparently IBD patients don’t harbour parasites.
This can in part be explained by the fact that some IBD patients have had bowel
resection, but even IBD patients with in intact bowel system are generally negative for
parasites.
We know that
in highly developed countries the prevalence of helminth infections has gone
down over the past few decades due to improved hygiene measures, but maybe also
due to other reasons, which have not been clarified, but as we have seen, many
of us are still positive for one or more intestinal parasites. However, most IBD
patients do not have any parasites at all. This correlates well with the
hygiene hypothesis, and it may be so that not only helminths, but also amoebae,
which are able to colonise our guts for months and even years, may be
co-responsible for 1) preventing us from developing inflammatory bowel disease
and other autoimmune diseases by immunomodulatory mechanisms, and 2)
maintaining a sound intestinal flora and ecology. Or is it so that these
protists are dependent on a certain gut ecology or gut flora in order to colonise our intestines for a longer period, and in this way,
they can be seen as indicators of a certain gut microbiota? Do they have any modulatory functions or do they happen to "lead their own life"?
As a
parasitologist and worshipper of most things eukaryotic, I was both pleased and
disconcerted after leaving the MetaHIT conference in Paris in March. Pleased,
since the stratification of people into enterotypes and correlation of
enterotypes to disease phenotypes suited my naïve, B/W perception of the world, but disconcerted since all presentations and posters addressed only
bacteria (and virus to a minor extent, - maybe one on archaea even?). But, how
about intestinal yeasts and parasites? Where in the gene catalogues and pools
of metagenomic data could I find information on eukaryotes? Nowhere. Which hopefully
boils down to methodological limitations rather than absence of interest.
The concept
of paving an avenue of new knowledge with metagenomics data is holistic in its
approach, but it currently fails to encompass a common part of the intestinal
microbiota, possibly due to methodological limitations. However, we are
probably facing the imminent inclusion of eukaryotic data in metagenomic
studies, and this will enable us to investigate the potential role of intestinal
protists and maybe yeasts as biomarkers of certain enterotypes and maybe even
disease or health phenotypes.
Further reading:
Stensvold CR (2012). Thinking Blastocystis out of the box. Trends in parasitology, 28 (8) PMID: 22704911
If you consider the intestines as ecosystems, these eukaryotes might be considered top predators. Their prevalence might suggest that they are often commensals or symbionts and only occasionally (like many bacteria) become pathogenic. Top predators are important to bigger ecosystems, why not our own personal ones?
ReplyDeleteThanks Dr. Stensvold for this information - after many lab tests, I finally got test results that show a large population of Iodamoeba Butschlii - with the inflammatory process that is going on I now understand that a pathogenic sub-type is what has been plaguing me. Is it ok to post our forum for protozoa parasites? pptu.lefora dot com
ReplyDeleteThanks again.
Thanks for commenting. Feel free to re-blog.
ReplyDelete