Open Access
Decrypting the environmental sources of Mycobacterium canettii by high-throughput biochemical profiling
Author(s) -
Ahmed Loukil,
Fériel Bouzid,
Djaltou Aboubaker Osman
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
plos one
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.99
H-Index - 332
ISSN - 1932-6203
DOI - 10.1371/journal.pone.0222078
Subject(s) - biology , mycobacterium tuberculosis , tuberculosis , bacteria , microbiology and biotechnology , chemistry , botany , medicine , genetics , pathology
Mycobacterium canettii is a smooth bacillus related to the Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex. It causes lymph nodes and pulmonary tuberculosis in patients living in countries of the Horn of Africa, including Djibouti. The environmental reservoirs of M . canettii are still unknown. We aimed to further decrypt these potential reservoirs by using an original approach of High-Throughput Carbon and Azote Substrate Profiling. The Biolog Phenotype profiling was performed on six clinical strains of M . canettii and one M . tuberculosis strain was used as a positive control. The experiments were duplicated and authenticated by negative controls. While M . tuberculosis metabolized 22/190 (11%) carbon substrates and 3/95 (3%) nitrogen substrates, 17/190 (8.9%) carbon substrates and three nitrogen substrates were metabolized by the six M . canettii strains forming the so-called corebiologome. A total at 16 carbon substrates and three nitrogen substrates were metabolized in common by M . tuberculosis and the six M . canettii strains . Moreover, at least one M . canettii strain metabolized 36/190 (19%) carbon substrates and 3/95 (3%) nitrogen substrates for a total of 39/285 (13%) substrates. Classifying these carbon and nitrogen substrates into ten potential environmental sources (plants, fruits and vegetables, bacteria, algae, fungi, nematodes, mollusks, mammals, insects and inanimate environment) significantly associated carbon and nitrogen substrates metabolized by at least one M . canettii strain with plants ( p = 0.006). These results suggest that some plants endemic in the Horn of Africa may serve as ecological niches for M . canettii . Further ethnobotanical studies will indicate plant usages by local populations, then guiding field microbiological investigations in order to prove the definite environmental reservoirs of this opportunistic tuberculous pathogen.