Virulence of Candida haemulonii complex in Galleria mellonella and efficacy of classical antifungal drugs: a comparative study with other clinically relevant non-albicans Candida species
Autor: | Lívia S. Ramos, Laura Silva, Danielle da Silva Trentin, Rodrigo Campos-Silva, André L.S. Santos, Alexandre José Macedo, Marta H. Branquinha |
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Rok vydání: | 2018 |
Předmět: |
0301 basic medicine
Antifungal Agents 030106 microbiology Colony Count Microbial Virulence Fungus Microbial Sensitivity Tests Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology Microbiology 03 medical and health sciences chemistry.chemical_compound In vivo Animals Candida biology Dose-Response Relationship Drug Host (biology) fungi Biofilm Candidiasis General Medicine biology.organism_classification Survival Analysis In vitro Galleria mellonella Lepidoptera Disease Models Animal chemistry Biofilms Larva Caspofungin |
Zdroj: | FEMS yeast research. 18(7) |
ISSN: | 1567-1364 |
Popis: | Candida haemulonii complex has emerged as notorious yeasts causing invasive infections with high rates of treatment failures. Since there is a particular interest in the development of non-mammalian host models to study microbial virulence, with the aim to evade the ethical impact of animal tests, herein we compared the virulence of C. haemulonii, C. duobushaemulonii and C. haemulonii var. vulnera with non-albicans Candida species (C. tropicalis, C. krusei and C. lusitaniae) on Galleria mellonella and the efficacy of antifungal drugs. All these fungi induced a dose-dependent effect on larvae killing, a decrease in hemocyte density and fungi were phagocytozed by hemocytes in equal proportions. Fungal inoculation caused early larvae melanization after some minutes of injection, followed by an augmented pigmentation after 24 h. Differences among species virulence can be explained, in part, by differences in growth rate and production of hydrolytic enzymes. First-line antifungals were tested with equivalent therapeutic doses and MIC profile in vitro was correlated with in vivo antifungal efficacy. Additionally, fungal burden increased in infected larvae along time and only caspofungin reduced the number of CFUs of C. haemulonii species complex. So, G. mellonella offers a simple and feasible model to study C. haemulonii complex virulence and drug efficacy. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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