Mycobacterium kansasii


Mycobacterium kansasii is a bacterium in the Mycobacterium family. The genus includes species known to cause serious diseases in mammals, including tuberculosis and leprosy, but this species is generally not dangerous to healthy people.

Description

, nonmotile, moderately-long to long, and acid-fast rods.

Colony characteristics

It forms smooth to rough colonies after 7 or more days of incubation and is considered a slow grower.
Colonies grown in dark are nonpigmented, when grown in light or when young colonies are exposed briefly to light, colonies become brilliant yellow according to the Runyon classification of Non-Tuberculous Mycobacteria.
If grown in a lighted incubator, most strains form dark red crystals of β-carotene on the surface and inside of colony.

Physiology

Its physiology is described as growth on Middlebrook 7H10 agar at 37°C within 7 days or more,
resistant to pyrazinamide and
susceptible to ethambutol.

Differential characteristics

It is closely related to the non-pathogenic, also slowly growing, nonpigmented, M. gastri.
Both species share an identical 16S rDNA but differentiation is possible by differences in the ITS and hsp65 sequences.
A commercial hybridisation assay to identify M. kansasii exists.

Pathogenesis

Chronic human pulmonary disease resembling tuberculosis. Extrapulmonary infections,, are uncommon. Rarely it causes disseminated disease except in patients with severely impaired cellular immunity. Patients with silicosis are at risk. It also appears in patients with hairy cell leukemia, but not in other lymphoproliferative disorders. Mycobacterium kansasii occasionally involves the skin in a sporotrichoid pattern. Normally considered not to be contagious from person to person its natural sources of infection remain unclear. Tap water is believed to be the major reservoir associated with human disease. Biosafety level 2 is indicated.

Type strain

First and most frequently isolated from human pulmonary secretions and lesions.
Strain ATCC 12478 = CIP 104589 = DSM 44162 = JCM 6379 = NCTC 13024.