Cryptococcus environmental species: molecular characterization, virulence and susceptibility to fluconazole before and after inoculation in a murine model. / Caracterização molecular, virulência e suscentibilidade ao fluconazol de espécies ambientais de Cryptococcus, antes e após inoculação em modelo murino

AUTOR(ES)
DATA DE PUBLICAÇÃO

2008

RESUMO

Species of Cryptococcus neoformans and C. gattii are the main ones in the genus causing infection in man while C. albidus and C. laurentii are less involved. This study evaluated the in vivo pathogenicity, factors and genes related to virulence and the susceptibility to fluconazole before and after inoculation in immunocompetent BALB/c mice of ten environmental isolates of C. neoformans, C. albidus and C. laurentii. Serotypes, mating types and molecular typing were also determined to complete the evaluation. Enzymes like proteinases, phospholipase, urease, production of melanin and growth at 37oC were investigated by classical methods, but gene characterization and determination of serotypes and mating types were investigated by PCR. Molecular typing was done by PCR-fingerprinting with primers (GACA)4 and M13. The microdilution method was used to determine the minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) of flucozanole. All C. neoformans isolates were serotype A and MAT-alfa and 9 of them when inoculated in animals killed 100% in up to 33 days. One isolate inoculated killed the animals in 40 to 82 days. Nine isolates were recovered from the animal lungs and brain in 7 and 14 days and the one which killed all animals in 12 days was only recovered on the 7th day. Animals inoculated with C. albidus and C. laurentii were alive until the tissue cultures of evaluated organs were negative. C. albidus was isolated mainly from the liver and lungs in up to 10 days after inoculation and strains of C. laurentii from the lungs and brain in up to 120 days. All isolates in the 3 species were capsule producers before and after inoculation. All strains of C. neoformans, 6 C. albidus and 6 C. laurentii grew at 37oC both before and after inoculation. All C. neoformans produced melanin and 6 C. laurentii produced it before inoculation and nine after. None was produced by C. albidus. Six isolates of C. neoformans and one of C. laurentii produced proteinases in both situations, before and after inoculation. Seven C. albidus isolates produced the protein hydrolyzing enzyme before inoculation and all after. Phospholipase enzyme was produced by all C. neoformans, and C. albidus and by 6 C. laurentii in both conditions, before and after inoculation. Urease activity was detected between 24 and 48 hours after incubation in a liquid medium for C. neoformans and C. laurentii cultures and after 24 to 96 hours for C. albidus. Fluconazole MICs ranged from 2 to 8 ug/ mL for C. neoformans isolates, from 8 to >= 64 ug/mL for C. albidus and from 1 to 64 ug/mL for C. laurentii in both conditions. Genes laccase (Lac1), phopholipase (PLB1) proteinase (cnap1), calcineurine (CNA1), urease (URE1) and ERG11, detected with the primers used were present in all C. neoformans. With exception of ERG11, which showed a band in agarose electrophoresis by all C. albidus, the other genes were not amplified in C. albidus and C. laurentii. Molecular typing by PCR-fingerprinting showed two molecular types in C. neoformans: VNI in 7 isolates and VNII in 3 isolates. Most C. albidus showed homogenous patterns in the bands generated and C. laurentii was the species with the higher genetic diversity by this methodology. It is concluded that isolate inoculations in animals does not alter phenotypes and no alteration is detected by molecular analysis. However, the high molecular heterogeneity of C. laurentii was detected.

ASSUNTO(S)

cryptococcus spp patogenicity molecular typing tipagem molecular fatores de virulência virulence factors patogenicidade cryptococcus spp

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