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Mycobacterium tusciae

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Species of bacterium

Mycobacterium tusciae
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Bacteria
Phylum: Actinomycetota
Class: Actinomycetia
Order: Mycobacteriales
Family: Mycobacteriaceae
Genus: Mycobacterium
Species: M. tusciae
Binomial name
Mycobacterium tusciae
Tortoli et al. 1999, DSM 44338

Mycobacterium tusciae is a slow-growing, scotochromogenic mycobacterium first isolated from a lymph node of an immunocompromised child and subsequently from tap water and from a respiratory specimen of a patient with chronic fibrosis. Etymology: tusciae referring to the Italian region of Tuscany, where the organisms were first isolated.

Description

Microscopy

  • Gram-positive, nonmotile and acid-fast rods.
  • Early microscopic morphology on Middlebrook 7H11 agar is characterized by a very elevated centre surrounded by an uneven flat fringe.

Colony characteristics

  • Colonies are rough and strongly yellow-pigmented.

Physiology

  • Slow growth on Löwenstein-Jensen medium at temperatures between 25 °C and 32 °C within 4 weeks.
  • Growth at 37 °C is inconsistent and requires longer incubation.
  • No growth at 42 °C and on MacConkey agar.
  • The type strain is susceptible in vitro to ciprofloxacin, clarithromycin, rifabutin, rifampicin, sparfloxacin and

streptomycin.

  • Inhaled silica, (asbestos) can also be a cause.

Pathophysiology

  • The lymph nodes irritation causes a response by the dust cells/alveolar macrophages, which cause enzymes, complement proteins, and regulatory factors such as interleukin-1 to get produced.
  • The macrophages also carry receptors for lymphokines, and lymphokines act as cytokines which further attract T cells, B cells and natural killer cells. The damage produced by the immune response causes the lung tissue to inflame, expand, and swell with fluid then leak.
  • Fibrin is then formed in response to the trauma, which is deposited around the wound in the form of a mesh. The fibrin hardens and dries forming a clot that stops leakage of fluid and blood. The macrophages try to remove the clot and the silica, bu just like asbestos, the silica cannot be digested by any of the breakdown mechanisms of the macrophages.
  • Macrophages continue to attempt to remove the foreign substance, and unless the silica is removed by mechanical expulsion means of coughing, the immune response continues.
  • Continued immune attack by the macrophages results in silicosis, which repeated relapses making the condition chronic. Exposed people usually remain asymptomatic long after the nodules are apparent on chest radiography.

Differential characteristics

Pathogenesis

  • Probably an opportunistic pathogen. First isolated from a lymph node of an immunocompromised child and subsequently from tap water and from a respiratory specimen of a patient with chronic fibrosis.

Type strain

  • Strain FI-25796 = CCUG 50996 = CIP 106367 = DSM 44338 = JCM 12692.

References

  • Tortoli E., 1999. Mycobacterium tusciae sp. nov. Int. J. Syst. Bacteriol., 49, 1839–1844. PMID 10555367

External links

Mycobacteria (including Nontuberculous)
Slowly growing
(R1P=photochromogenic;
R2S=scotochromogenic;
R3N=nonchromogenic)
Long helix 18
(TKHGC)
M. tuberculosis group
MTC
M. tuberculosis
M. bovis
M. africanum
M. microti
M. canettii
M. caprae
M. pinnipedii
MPM
R1P
M. marinum
R2S
M. pseudoshottsii
R3N
M. ulcerans
M. shottsii
M. ulcerans liflandii
Leprosy
M. leprae
M. lepraemurium
M. lepromatosis
R3N
other
M. lacus
M. kumamotonense
K/H groups
M. kansasii group
MAC
R3N
M. intracellulare/M. avium
M. avium subp. paratuberculosis
M. chimaera
R2S
M. bohemicum
GK
R1P
M. kansasii
R3N
M. gastri
R2S
M. nebraskense
M. seoulense
R3N
M. scrofulaceum
M. haemophilum group
M. gordonae group
M. conspicuum group
Long helix 18
(other)
M. xenopi group
M. celatum group
M. hiberniae group
Short helix 18
M. simiae clade
M. simiae group
R3N
M. genavense/M. triplex
M. florentinum/M. montefiorense
M. heidelbergense/M. parmense
M. simiae
R2S
M. lentiflavum
M. kubicae group
R3N
M. parascrofulaceum
R2S
M. palustre/M. kubicae
M. interjectum group
M. interjectum
M. saskatchewanense
M. intermedium group
Ungrouped
Rapidly growing/
Runyon IV
M. neoaurum group
F/T groups
M. fortuitum group
M. vaccae group
M. smegmatis group
M. chelonae group
M. elephantis group
Taxon identifiers
Mycobacterium tusciae


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