Kauffman–White classification

The Kauffmann–White classification or Kauffman and White classification scheme[1][2] is a system that classifies the genus Salmonella into serotypes, based on surface antigens. It is named after Philip Bruce White and Fritz Kauffmann. First the "O" antigen type is determined based on oligosaccharides associated with lipopolysaccharide. Then the "H" antigen is determined based on flagellar proteins (H is short for the German Hauch meaning "breath" or "mist"; O stands for German ohne meaning "without"). Since Salmonella typically exhibit phase variation between two motile phenotypes,[3] different "H" antigens may be expressed. Salmonella that can express only one "H" antigen phase consequently have motile and non-motile phenotypes and are termed monophasic, whilst isolates that lack any "H" antigen expression are termed non-motile.[4] Pathogenic strains of Salmonella Typhi, Salmonella Paratyphi C, and Salmonella Dublin carry the capsular "Vi" antigen (Vi for virulence),[5] which is a special subtype of the capsule's K antigen (from the German word Kapsel meaning capsule).

Kauffmann–White classification for Salmonella

Salmonella (species) serotype (O antigen) : (H1 antigen) : (H2 antigen)
Examples

Salmonella enterica serotype Typhimurium 1,4,5,12:i:1,2

monophasic variant of Salmonella Typhimurium 1,4,5,12:i:-

"O"-group Serovar "O" antigens Phase 1 "H" antigens Phase 2 "H" antigens
A S.Paratyphi A 1,2,12 a no phase 2 antigen
  S. Paratyphi A var. Durazzo 2,12 a no phase 2 antigen
B S. Paratyphi B 1,4,5,12 b 1,2
  S. Paratyphi B var. Odense 1,4,12 b 1,2
  S. Java 1,4,5,12 b (1,2)
  S. Limete 1,4,12,27 b 1,5
  S. Typhimurium 1,4,5,12 i 1,2
  S. Typhimurium var. Copenhagen 1,4,12 i 1,2
  S. Agama 4,12 i 1,6
  S. Abortus-equi 4,12 no phase 1 antigen e,n,x
  S. Abortus-ovis 4,12 c 1,6
  S. Agona 4,12 f,g,s no phase 2 antigen
  S. Brandenburg 4,12 l,v e,n,z15
  S. Bredeney 1,4,12,27 l,v 1,7
  S. Derby 1,4,5,12 f,g no phase 2 antigen
  S. Heidelberg 1,4,5,12 r 1,2
  S. Saintpaul 1,4,5,12 e,h 1,2
  S. Salinatis 4,12 d,e,h d,e,n,z15
  S. Stanley 4,5,12 d 1,2
C1 S. Paratyphi C 6,7, c 1,5
  S. Choleraesuis 6,7 c 1,5
  S. Choleraesuis var. Kunzendorf 6,7 (c) 1,5
  S. Decatur 6,7 c 1,5
  S. Typhisuis 6,7 c 1,5
  S. Bareilly 6,7 y 1,5
  S. Infantis 6,7 r 1,5
  S. Menston 6,7 g,s,t no phase 2 antigen
  S. Montevideo 6,7 g,m,s no phase 2 antigen
  S. Oranienburg 6,7 m,t no phase 2 antigen
  S. Thompson 6,7 k 1,5
C2 S. Bovismorbificans 6,8 r 1,5
  S. Newport 6,8 e,h 1,2
D S. Typhi 9,12,Vi d no phase 2 antigen
  S. Ndolo 9,12 d 1,5
  S. Dublin 1,9,12 g,p no phase 2 antigen
  S. Enteritidis 1,9,12 g,m no phase 2 antigen
  S. Gallinarum 1,9,12 no phase 1 antigen no phase 2 antigen
  S. Pullorum (1),9,12 no phase 1 antigen no phase 2 antigen
  S. Panama 1,9,12 l,v 1,5
  S. Miami 1,9,12 a 1,5
  S. Sendai 1,9,12 a 1,5
E1 S. Anatum 3,10 e,h 1,6
  S. Give 3,10 l,v 1,7
  S. London 3,10 l,v 1,6
  S. Meleagridis 3,10 e,h l,w
E2 S. Cambridge 3,15 e,h l,w
  S. Newington 3,15 e,h 1,6
E3 S. Minneapolis (3),(15),34 e,h 1,6
E4 S. Senftenberg 1,3,19 g,s,t no phase 2 antigen
  S. Simsbury 1,3,19 no phase 1 antigen z27
F S. Aberdeen 11 i 1,2
G S. Cubana 1,13,23 z29 no phase 2 antigen
  S. Poona 13,22 z 1,6
H S. Heves 6,14,24 d 1,5
  S. Onderstepoort 1,6,14,25 e,h 1,5
I S. Brazil 16 a 1,5
  S. Hvittingfoss 16 b e,n,x
Others S. Kirkee 17 b 1,2
  S. Adelaide 35 f,g no phase 2 antigen
  S. Locarno 57 z29 z42

The cost of maintaining a full set of antisera precludes all but reference laboratories from performing a complete serological identification of salmonella isolates. Most laboratories stock only a limited range of antisera, and the choice of stock sera is largely determined by the nature of the specimens to be processed.

Representative stock of antisera

A common set of working antisera is shown below:

O-antisera H-antisera
polyvalent-O, groups A-G polyvalent-H, specific and non-specific
2-O, group A polyvalent-H, non-specific factors 1,2,5,6,7
4-O, group B a-H (S. Paratyphi A)
6, 7-O, group C1 b-H (S. Paratyphi B)
8-O, group C2 c-H (S. Paratyphi C)
9-O, group D d-H (S. Typhi)
3, 10, 15, 19-O group E e,h-H (S. Newport)
11-O, group F f,g-H (S. Derby)
13, 22-O, group G g,m-H (S. Enteritidis)
  i-H (S. Typhimurium)
  k-H (S. Thompson)
  l,v-H (S. London)
  m,t-H (S. Oranienburg)
  r-H (S. Bovismorbificans)

Laboratories that are likely to investigate typhoid also carry antiserum raised against the Vi antigen.

A set of "Rapid Diagnostic Sera" is also held and is used for determination of common specific H-antigens except i-H. After obtaining a positive agglutination with the polyvalent-H specific and non-specific antiserum, the three RDS antisera are used to identify the H antigen present. Depending on the pattern of positive and negative reactions with the RDS antisera, the specific H antigen may be identified:

antigen RDS1 RDS2 RDS3
b agglutination agglutination no agglutination
d agglutination no agglutination agglutination
E agglutination agglutination agglutination
G no agglutination no agglutination agglutination
k no agglutination agglutination agglutination
L no agglutination agglutination no agglutination
r agglutination no agglutination no agglutination

E = polyvalent for eh, enx, etc.
G = polyvalent for gm, gp, etc.
L = polyvalent for lv, lw, etc.

Connection of O and H symbols to the work of Weil and Felix

This use of the O and H symbols is based on the historic observations of Edmund Weil (1879–1922) and Arthur Felix (1887–1956) of a thin surface film produced by agar-grown flagellated Proteus strains, a film that resembled the mist produced by breath on a glass. Flagellated (swarming, motile) variants were therefore designated H forms (German Hauch, for film, literally breath or mist); nonflagellated (nonswarming, nonmotile) variants growing as isolated colonies and lacking the surface film were designated as O forms (German ohne Hauch, without film [i.e., without surface film of mist droplets]).[6][7][8][9]

References

  1. Murray PR, Baron EJ, Pfaller MA, Tenover FC, Yolken RH, 1995. Manual of Clinical Microbiology. Washington, DC:ASM Press.
  2. Grimont, Patrick. "Antigenic formulae of the Salmonella serovars, 9th edition". WHO Collaborating Centre for Reference and Research on Salmonella. Retrieved 2 July 2013.
  3. Chiou, C. S.; Huang, J. F.; Tsai, L. H.; Hsu, K. M.; Liao, C. S.; Chang, H. L. (2006). "A simple and low-cost paper-bridged method for Salmonella phase reversal". Diagnostic Microbiology and Infectious Disease. 54 (4): 315–317. doi:10.1016/j.diagmicrobio.2005.10.009.
  4. European Food Standards Agency (2010). "Scientific Opinion on monitoring and assessment of the public health risk of "Salmonella Typhimurium-like" strains". EFSA Journal. 8 (10): 7–8. doi:10.2903/j.efsa.2010.1826. Retrieved 2 July 2013.
  5. European Food Standards Agency (2010). "Scientific Opinion on monitoring and assessment of the public health risk of "Salmonella Typhimurium-like" strains". EFSA Journal. 8 (10): 7–8. doi:10.2903/j.efsa.2010.1826. Retrieved 2 July 2013.
  6. See also de:Kauffmann-White-Schema in the German Wikipedia.
  7. Weil, E. & Felix, A. (1917) Wien. Klin. Wschr. 30, 1509, cited in Smith, R.W. & Koffler, H., Bacterial Flagella, In Advances in Microbial Physiology, Vol. 6 (A.H. Rose & J.F. Wilkinson, Eds.), p. 251, Academic Press, 1971
  8. Rietschel, E.T. & Westphal, O. Endotoxin: Historical Perspectives, In Endotoxin in Health Disease (H. Brade, Ed.), p. 11, CRC Press, 1999.
  9. Hahon, N., Ed. Selected Papers on the Pathogenic Rickettsiae, p. 79, Harvard University Press, 1968.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.