Affiliation:
1. Department of Medicine, Division of Infectious Diseases, Santa Clara Valley Medical Center, and California Institute for Medical Research, San Jose, California 95128, and Department of Medicine, Division of Infectious Diseases and Geographic Medicine, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, California 94305
Abstract
ABSTRACT
There have been increased reports of the isolation of unusual genotypic groups of
Candida albicans
(groups C and D) based on a well-defined genotypic method; this method uses cellular DNA digested with the
Eco
RI enzyme and the restriction fragment length polymorphisms (RFLPs) generated by agarose gel electrophoresis. The aim of the present study was to use additional molecular tools to characterize these unusual strains and to compare them with authentic strains of
C. dubliniensis
, a recently delineated species, and type I
C. stellatoidea
. The RFLPs of PCR products generated from the intergenic transcribed spacer (ITS) region did not differentiate among
C. albicans
genotypes A, B, and C and type I
C. stellatoidea
. However, this method did differentiate the
C. albicans
genotype D strains, which were identical to
C. dubliniensis
. The RFLPs generated by
Hae
III digestion of the PCR products of the V3 region of the 25S rRNA gene (rDNA) could differentiate the same groups as RFLP analysis of the PCR amplicon of the ITS region.
C. albicans
genotype B isolates have been shown to have a transposable intron in the 25S rDNA, whereas genotype A isolates do not;
C. dubliniensis
strains also have an intron that is larger than that in genotype B
C. albicans
strains but that is in the same location. PCR designed to span this region resulted in a single product for
C. albicans
genotype A (450 bp), B (840 bp), type 1
C. stellatoidea
(840 bp), and
C. dubliniensis
(1,080 bp), whereas the
C. albicans
genotype C isolates had two major products (450 and 840 bp). All
C. albicans
genotype D isolates gave a PCR product identical to that given by
C. dubliniensis
. These results indicate that those strains previously designated
C. albicans
genotype D are in fact
C. dubliniensis
, that no differences were found between type 1
C. stellatoidea
and
C. albicans
genotype B strains, and that the
C. albicans
genotype C strains appear to have the transposable intron incompletely inserted throughout the ribosomal repeats in their genomes. The results of the antifungal susceptibility testing of 105 of these strains showed that, for fluconazole, strains of
C. dubliniensis
were significantly more susceptible than strains of each of the
C. albicans
genotypes (genotypes A, B, and C). The flucytosine susceptibility results indicated that strains of
C. albicans
genotype A were significantly less susceptible than either
C. albicans
genotype B or
C. albicans
genotype C strains. These results indicate that there is a correlation between the
Candida
groups and antifungal susceptibility.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Cited by
167 articles.
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