Summary

Capsular Serotyping of Streptococcus pneumoniae by Latex Agglutination

Published: September 25, 2014
doi:

Summary

Latex agglutination testing is a simple, rapid and inexpensive method for serotyping Streptococcus pneumoniae, and has also been widely applied in diagnostic microbiology. This manuscript describes the in-house production of latex agglutination reagents, quality control procedures and the application of this technique to pneumococcal serotyping.

Abstract

Latex agglutination reagents are widely used in microbial diagnosis, identification and serotyping. Streptococcus pneumoniae (the pneumococcus) is a major cause of morbidity and mortality world-wide. Current vaccines target the pneumococcal capsule, and there are over 90 capsular serotypes. Serotyping pneumococcal isolates is therefore important for assessing the impact of vaccination programs and for epidemiological purposes. The World Health Organization has recommended latex agglutination as an alternative method to the ‘gold standard’ Quellung test for serotyping pneumococci. Latex agglutination is a relatively simple, quick and inexpensive method; and is therefore suitable for resource-poor settings as well as laboratories with high-volume workloads. Latex agglutination reagents can be prepared in-house utilizing commercially-sourced antibodies that are passively attached to latex particles. This manuscript describes a method of production and quality control of latex agglutination reagents, and details a sequential testing approach which is time- and cost-effective.

This method of production and quality control may also be suitable for other testing purposes.

Introduction

Streptococcus pneumoniae (the pneumococcus) is a major cause of morbidity and mortality in children under the age of five years old world-wide, particularly in resource-poor settings1,2. Pneumococcal disease ranges from localized infections to life threatening conditions such as pneumonia, sepsis and meningitis1,2.

More than 90 serotypes of pneumococci have been identified based on differences in their capsular polysaccharide3. Current vaccines target the capsular polysaccharide and provide protection from the major serotypes causing invasive disease4. Serotyping pneumococcal isolates is important for assessing the impact of vaccination on carriage and disease as well as providing broader epidemiological information5,6. The current ‘gold standard’ method for pneumococcal serotyping is the Quellung test, but it is time consuming and requires some skill to perform7. Latex agglutination is an alternative serotyping method recommended by the World Health Organization7. Latex agglutination is quick and simple to perform, and is employed in many laboratories worldwide8-11. Importantly, latex agglutination has shown comparable accuracy to the Quellung test for pneumococcal serotyping10,12-14. Overall, this method is ideal for resource-poor settings as well as high throughput laboratories.

Latex agglutination reagents (‘latex reagents’) are created by the attachment of antibodies to latex particles15. In a positive reaction, these labeled particles agglutinate in the presence of specific antigen. Commercial latex reagents are available for a restricted range of serotypes. Latex reagents can also be prepared in-house using commercially available antisera10. Mixtures of antisera (‘pools’) as well as specific antisera to pneumococcal serogroups (e.g., group 19), individual serotypes (e.g., serotype 5), and to specific antigens (‘factors’, e.g., factor 19c recognizing serotype 19A) for further defining serotypes within groups are available16.

This manuscript outlines the major steps in the production of latex reagents using passive attachment of commercially available antisera to latex particles. The quality control (QC) aspects of this method are described, and a protocol for the use of latex reagents for pneumococcal serotyping is included.

Protocol

1. Preparation of in-house Latex Reagents

  1. Preparation of glycine buffered saline (GBS)
    1. Add 1.5 g glycine, 11.7 g sodium chloride and 100 ml of distilled water to a 200 ml glass beaker.
    2. Mix to dissolve using a magnetic stirrer.
    3. Transfer mixture to a 500 ml measuring cylinder and add distilled water to make a total of 200 ml.
    4. Transfer the solution back to the 200 ml beaker, check the pH and adjust to 8.2 with 5 M sodium hydroxide. NOTE: Sodium hydroxide is corrosive, wear personal protective equipment.
    5. Filter sterilize the solution using 0.22 µM filters and several 60 ml syringes into a 250 ml preautoclaved screw capped glass bottle.
    6. Store at RT.
  2. Preparation of GBS with 0.2% bovine serum albumin
    1. Add 0.2 g of bovine serum albumin (BSA) powder and 100 ml of GBS to a 200 ml glass beaker and mix to dissolve using a magnetic stirrer.
    2. Filter sterilize the solution through 0.22 µM filters using several 60 ml syringes into a 250 ml preautoclaved screw capped glass bottle.
    3. Store at 4 °C.
  3. Latex reagent preparation
    1. Label a 2 ml round bottom microfuge tube.
      NOTE: round bottom tubes are used to minimize particle settling which may affect antibody attachment.
    2. Using a P1000 pipette with sterile tips add 975 µl of GBS into the microfuge tube, then add 25 µl of appropriate pneumococcal antiserum for the latex reagent being prepared (i.e., pool, group, type or factor). Invert five times to mix.
    3. Dilute polystyrene latex particles 1:10 by adding 120 µl of latex particles to 1,080 µl of sterile physiological saline.
      NOTE: This can be made in larger volumes, but should be made fresh each time the latex reagents are produced.
    4. Add 1,000 µl of the 1:10 latex suspension (prepared in step 1.3.3) to the 1,000 µl 1:40 antiserum suspension (prepared in step 1.3.2). Invert five times to mix.
    5. Incubate at 37 °C on a slowly rotating wheel (e.g., 4 rpm for a wheel of 38.5 cm diameter) for 2 hr.
    6. Centrifuge for 15 min at 1,100 x g. Discard the supernatant and gently resuspend the pellet in 2 ml of sterile saline.
    7. Centrifuge for 15 min at 1,100 x g. Discard the supernatant and add 1 ml of GBS and gently resuspend the pellet.
    8. Pipette the latex suspension into a labeled 5 ml screw capped tube. Add another 1 ml of GBS.
    9. Add 2 ml of GBS containing 0.2% BSA (w/v) (pH 8.2) (prepared in step 1.2). Add 40 µl of 10% (w/v) solution of sodium azide as a preservative.
      NOTE: Sodium azide is hazardous if inhaled, and is a skin and eye irritant. It is desirable to purchase a prepared 10% solution rather than the powdered form, as this minimizes the risk of inhalation exposure. Personal protective equipment (including gloves and splash goggles) should be worn when handling this reagent. Refer to the Material safety data sheet for details.
    10. Store latex reagents at 4 °C.
  4. Preparation of negative control latex reagent
    1. Label a 2 ml round bottom microfuge tube.
      NOTE: round bottom tubes are used to minimize particle settling which may affect antibody attachment.
    2. Using a P1000 pipette with sterile tips add 975 µl of GBS into the microfuge tube, then add 25 µl normal rabbit antiserum. Invert five times to mix.
    3. Proceed as in steps 1.3.3 to 1.3.10 above

2. Quality Control (QC) of Latex Reagents

  1. Bring latex reagent to RT. Immediately before use, gently mix the latex reagent by inverting the tube several times.
  2. Check reagent for autoagglutination by pipetting 15 µl onto a glass microscope slide and proceed as in steps 4.7 and 4.8 below. There should be no agglutination of the latex particles. The reagent should appear white and smooth.
  3. Test the reagent against a panel of low passage pneumococcal isolates. Use freshly grown cultures prepared as in step 3. The panel of isolates should include isolates of the ‘target’ serotype (the specific serotype for the reagent being tested) and ‘non-target’ serotypes (isolates of other serotypes that should not normally cross react with the reagent). Include at least one isolate of each target and non-target serotype for each latex reagent undergoing QC. If there is only one target or non-target serotype, test two different isolates of the particular serotype.
    NOTE: The testing panel should include several isolates of each serotype, some of which are uncommon in invasive disease and/or type culture collections. It is preferable to include some carriage isolates, as they are often more demanding to serotype (data not shown), thereby further testing the capacity of the reagents and ensuring that the reagents are likely capable of serotyping both invasive and carriage isolates.
  4. Proceed with testing of latex reagents with target and non-target pneumococcal isolates as per the method described in steps 3 and 4 below.
  5. Quality control reagents at time of production and then at least annually thereafter.
    NOTE: If a reagent does not pass QC, the batch must be discarded and a new preparation made. In the event of repeat QC failure we recommend the reagents be produced using the alternate methods described in Ortika et al., 20138 and in the discussion below.

3. Preparation of Pneumococcal Cultures for Serotyping

  1. Using a sterile loop select a single colony of the pneumococcal isolate and streak this out onto a solid nonselective blood agar so that the primary inoculum covers approximately one third of the plate surface. Streak for single colonies.
    NOTE: Plates prepared from defibrinated horse or sheep blood are suitable; but blood plates prepared with human blood or citrated animal blood are not.
  2. Incubate plate O/N at 37 °C in an atmosphere of 5% CO2.
  3. Observe the growth on the plate for purity and assess that there is sufficient growth for serotyping.
    NOTE: A pure culture of the pneumococcal isolate is required for serotyping. In our experience, confluent, or near confluent growth covering approximately one third of the plate surface is usually sufficient to complete serotyping. As pneumococcal cultures may be prone to autolysis, cultures prepared for serotyping should be tested within 24 hr of subculture. Do not take the culture plate out of the incubator more than 15 to 20 min before serotyping commences.

4. Conducting Latex Agglutination Serotyping

  1. Remove all latex reagents from refrigerator and allow them to warm to RT for approximately 30 min. Immediately before use, gently invert the tubes to mix the reagents.
  2. Label a microscope slide.
  3. Place 15 µl of negative control latex reagent onto the microscope slide.
  4. Using a sterile disposable 1 µl loop take a sweep of the pneumococcal culture so that the loop is approximately half full.
  5. Gently smear the inoculum onto the surface of the slide close to the drop of negative control latex reagent. The inoculum should be visible on the glass slide.
  6. Quickly and thoroughly mix the inoculum into the negative control latex reagent using the loop. Ensure that the drop does not spread further than its initial size.
  7. Pick up the slide, holding it at both ends. Rock the slide back and forth for 1 min. Take care to keep the liquid moving slowly, and ensure that the size of the drop does not increase.
    NOTE: Alternatively use a plate rocker.
  8. Observe for macroscopic agglutination (i.e., by naked eye) and clearing of the suspension against a black background.
  9. If the negative control latex reagent shows no agglutination or clearing continue testing the culture, replacing the test latex reagents for the negative control latex reagent in steps 4.1 to 4.8 above. A fresh loop must be used each time. Proceed with testing of the latex reagents starting with the pools.
  10. Test each of the 'pool' latex reagents in succession until a positive test is obtained.
    NOTE: The order of testing of the pools may be done in ‘rounds’ to reflect the local incidence of particular serotypes (e.g., by testing for the three most likely pools on the first slide. If a positive reaction is not obtained, then test the next three most likely of the remaining pools on the second slide; and so on until a positive reaction is obtained). This ensures that the most common serotypes are tested first, minimizing the time and reagents needed.
  11. Using the antisera manufacturer’s key determine which individual antisera are represented in the positive pool.
  12. Test each of the groups or types contained in the positive pool individually to determine the ‘group’ or ‘type’ as in steps 4.1 to 4.8 above.
  13. Determine the result by reference to the antisera manufacturer’s key. If a ‘type’ is determined (e.g., serotype 5), then no further testing is needed and this result is recorded.
  14. If a ‘group’ is determined (e.g., group 19), then refer to the manufacturers key to determine the factors to be tested. Continue testing with the individual ‘factor’ latex reagents and determine the final serotype (e.g., serotype 19B).

Representative Results

A positive latex reaction occurs when type-specific antibody attached to the latex particle binds to the capsule of the pneumococcus, and agglutination of the antibody labeled particles ensues15. Figure 1A shows a positive reaction which is characterized by visible agglutination and clearing of the background suspension. A negative reaction is characterized by the latex agglutination reagent suspension remaining smooth and white (Figure 1B). The reagents are optimized so that a positive reaction should be observed before the end of the one min time interval (usually detectable in approximately 20 sec). We do not recommend reading reactions after the 1 min time interval. Very occasionally, reactions display weak agglutination around the edge of the drop that is not accompanied by clearing of the background suspension, or appear ‘stringy’ with no background clearing (data not shown). These are most likely negative reactions. In such cases, we recommend retesting and/or further investigation using another serotyping method (for example the Quellung reaction17).

Figure 1
Figure 1. Positive and negative latex agglutination reactions. Preparations of a pneumococcal isolate mixed with latex agglutination reagent showing a positive reaction (A) or a negative reaction (B). Agglutination accompanied by clearing of the background is seen in the positive reaction (A).There is no visible agglutination with the negative control latex reagent or in a negative test reaction (B). Photographs8 used with permission. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.

Discussion

Latex agglutination is a simple, quick and inexpensive method for pneumococcal serotyping. Commercial pneumococcal latex agglutination reagents are available, but they currently do not differentiate all known pneumococcal serotypes10,12. However, latex agglutination reagents can be easily produced in-house using purchased antisera raised against specific pneumococcal capsular antigens. In the method described here, antibodies are passively attached to latex particles to make a set of latex agglutination reagents.

A positive latex reaction occurs when specific antibodies bound to the latex particles attach to antigens on the polysaccharide capsule of the pneumococcal isolate 18,19. The latex particles attached to the antibodies allow the specific antibody-antigen reaction to be visualized without magnification.

Latex agglutination is a suitable method for high throughput laboratories and also for resource-poor settings. Key advantages of the latex agglutination method are that no specialized equipment is required to perform the test, reagents have a shelf life of at least 2 years when stored at 4 °C8, and that it is inexpensive, simple and quick to perform. Serotyping a pneumococcal isolate by latex agglutination takes approximately 10 min, and up to four latex reagents can be tested in parallel on the one slide. Furthermore, if the prevalence of serotypes is known for the relevant epidemiological setting, testing can be performed in rounds starting with the pools containing the most common serotypes similarly to the Quellung test17. This approach minimizes the number of tests needed to determine the serotype. The method is also highly reproducible between different operators (data not shown). A disadvantage of latex agglutination serotyping is that producing the reagents is time consuming, taking approximately 4 hr; although multiple reagents can easily be produced in parallel. Furthermore, some antigens are common across different pneumococcal serotypes, resulting in cross-reactions with some antisera (e.g., serotype 29, 42 and Group 35). However, these cross reactions are well characterized when using commercial antisera (which is usually preabsorbed to remove the more problematic cross-reacting antibodies) and additional reaction tables are provided by the manufacturer in order to distinguish which serotype is present. Latex reagents may also cross react if the antibodies are not aligned properly on the latex particles; these are detected as QC failures. In our experience, rigorous QC is central to the success of this method, even when commercially available antisera are used for production. QC takes approximately 15 min per reagent and relies on a set of appropriate QC isolates as described above.

The method described here results in reagents that give a positive reaction well within the test period. In our experience, false positives are rare in practice (data not shown). Occasional false negative reactions are observed; usually these relate to known issues with a particular antiserum (e.g., serogroup 6 isolates may not react with pool B antiserum), or down regulation of capsule expression by the isolate. Using the serotyping algrorithm provided by the manufacturer is also important, as in most cases a false positive or negative reaction will lead to a ‘blind end’ result. In these cases, and when reactions are difficult to interpret, we recommend repeat-testing and/or testing by an alternative method such as the Quellung reaction.

Some troubleshooting is occasionally required to make satisfactory latex reagents. In the method described here, the antibody is attached to latex particles via passive adsorption15,19, so a critical variable is the concentration of antibody used, which determines how well the surface of the latex particles is covered and the subsequent alignment of the antibody active sites15,20. Consequently, if insufficient or excess antibody is attached to the latex particles, the antibody-antigen reactions will not be optimal, and unsatisfactory reagents may be produced15,20,21. As antibody titers vary between different lots of antisera, a standard set of dilutions may not produce reagents that perform well8. A useful starting point is to use a 1:40 dilution of antiserum, and if this is not successful, dilute the antiserum further. In our experience this usually resolves the problem8. In a small number of cases reagents may show weak agglutination that is not accompanied by clearing of the suspension when tested with target isolates. In these cases diluting the antiserum does not improve the quality of the reagent, but satisfactory reagents can usually be produced by omitting the centrifugation and wash steps8,22.

Antibody coated latex particles are used commonly in diagnostic microbiology for detection, identification or serotyping of many different microbes15,20. As such, the method described here may be suitable for preparing latex reagents for other purposes, provided suitable antisera is available and adequate QC procedures are adopted.

Divulgations

The authors have nothing to disclose.

Acknowledgements

This work was part of the PneuCarriage project, funded by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation with contribution by the Victorian Government’s Operational Infrastructure Support Program.

Materials

Name of Material/ Equipment Company Catalog Number Comments/Description
Microparticles based on polystyrene, 800 nm Sigma 65984-10 ml-F Or other volumes as required
Normal rabbit serum Antibodies Australia  NRS-1ml Or other volumes as required, bring to room temperature before use
Pneumococcus (Neufeld) antisera SSI Diagnostica Various Bring to room temperature before use
http://www.ssi.dk/ssidiagnostica
Sterile Bovine Albumin  Sigma A-4503 Bring to room temperature before use
Sodium azide 10% (v/v) solution  VWR International ROAC3902/100ml Caution: hazardous if inhaled; skin and eye irritant
Eppendorf Safe-Lock tubes, 2 ml Eppendorf 0030 120.094 Round bottom
Sodium chloride Merck 10241.AP
Calibrated disposable inoculating loops 1 µl Copan CD175SO1
Glass microscope slides 76 mm x 26 mm Thermo Fisher Scientific LBS 2950RC
5 M NaOH BDH 10252 Caution: highly corrosive
Glycine Merck 10119.05
Horse Blood Agar (HBA) plates Thermo Fisher Scientific PP2001 Bring to room temperature before use
http://www.thermofisher.com.au
Rotating wheel Wyble Engineering Development Corporation Not available
Polystyrene flat bottom screw cap tube, 5 ml Technoplas S5016SU
60 ml syringes without needles Terumo SS-60L
Millex-GP syringe filter unit, 0.22 µm Merck Millipore SLGP033RS
Brochure on Neufeld antisera Statens Serum Institut Key to determining serotypes
http://www.ssi.dk/ssidiagnostica
Key to pneumococcal factor serum Statens Serum Institut 18058 For determining serotype within Groups
http://www.ssi.dk/ssidiagnostica
*alternative sources are available for most materials

References

  1. Rudan, I., et al. Epidemiology and etiology of childhood pneumonia in 2010: estimates of incidence, severe morbidity, mortality, underlying risk factors and causative pathogens for 192 countries. J Glob Health. 3 (10401), (2013).
  2. O’Brien, K. L., et al. Burden of disease caused by Streptococcus pneumoniae in children younger than 5 years: global estimates. Lancet. 374, 893-902 (2009).
  3. Henrichsen, J. Six newly recognized types of Streptococcus pneumoniae. J Clin Microbiol. 33, 2759-2762 (1995).
  4. Hausdorff, W. P., Bryant, J., Paradiso, P. R., Siber, G. R. Which pneumococcal serogroups cause the most invasive disease: implications for conjugate vaccine formulation and use, part I. Clin Infect Dis. 30, 100-121 (2000).
  5. Mulholland, K., Satzke, C. Serotype replacement after pneumococcal vaccination. Lancet. 379, 1388-1389 (2012).
  6. Weinberger, D. M., Malley, R., Lipsitch, M. Serotype replacement in disease after pneumococcal vaccination. Lancet. 378, 1962-1973 (2011).
  7. Satzke, C., et al. Standard method for detecting upper respiratory carriage of Streptococcus pneumoniae: Updated recommendations from the World Health Organization Pneumococcal Carriage Working Group. Vaccine. , (2013).
  8. Ortika, B. D., Habib, M., Dunne, E. M., Porter, B. D., Satzke, C. Production of latex agglutination reagents for pneumococcal serotyping. BMC Res Notes. 6 (49), (2013).
  9. Adegbola, R. A., et al. Serotype and antimicrobial susceptibility patterns of isolates of Streptococcus pneumoniae causing invasive disease in The Gambia 1996-2003. Trop Med Int Health. 11, 1128-1135 (2006).
  10. Slotved, H. C., Kaltoft, M., Skovsted, I. C., Kerrn, M. B., Espersen, F. Simple, rapid latex agglutination test for serotyping of pneumococci (Pneumotest-Latex). J Clin Microbiol. 42, 2518-2522 (2004).
  11. Turner, P., et al. Improved detection of nasopharyngeal cocolonization by multiple pneumococcal serotypes by use of latex agglutination or molecular serotyping by microarray. J Clin Microbiol. 49, 1784-1789 (2011).
  12. Mudany, M. A., Kikuchi, K., Totsuka, K., Uchiyama, T. Evaluation of a new serotyping kit for Streptococcus pneumoniae. J Med Microbiol. 52, 975-980 (2003).
  13. Lalitha, M. K., et al. Serotyping of Streptococcus pneumoniae by agglutination assays: a cost-effective technique for developing countries. Bull World Health Organ. 74, 387-390 (1996).
  14. Shutt, C. K., Samore, M., Carroll, K. C. Comparison of the Denka Seiken slide agglutination method to the quellung test for serogrouping of Streptococcus pneumoniae isolates. J Clin Microbiol. 42, 1274-1276 (2004).
  15. Gella, F., Serra, J., Gener, J. Latex agglutination procedures in immunodiagnosis. Pure Appl Chem. 63, 1131-1134 (1991).
  16. Habib, M., Porter, B. D., Satzke, C. Capsular serotyping of Streptococcus pneumoniae using the Quellung reaction. J. Vis. Exp. (84), (2014).
  17. Arai, S., et al. Use of antiserum-coated latex particles for serotyping Streptococcus pneumoniae. Microbiol Immunol. 45, 159-162 (2001).
  18. Lafong, A. C., Crothers, E. Simple latex agglutination method for typing pneumococci. J Clin Pathol. 41, 230-231 (1988).
  19. Ortega-Vinuesa, J. L., Bastos-Gonzalez, D. A review of factors affecting the performances of latex agglutination tests. J Biomater Sci Polym Ed. 12, 379-408 (2001).
  20. Yap, K. L. Development of a slide latex agglutination test for rotavirus antigen detection. Malays J Pathol. 16, 49-56 (1994).
  21. Severin, W. P. Latex agglutination in the diagnosis of meningococcal meningitis. J Clin Pathol. 25, 1079-1082 (1972).

Play Video

Citer Cet Article
Porter, B. D., Ortika, B. D., Satzke, C. Capsular Serotyping of Streptococcus pneumoniae by Latex Agglutination. J. Vis. Exp. (91), e51747, doi:10.3791/51747 (2014).

View Video