Microevolution of Candida albicans Strains during Catheter-Related Candidemia

Author:

Shin Jong Hee1,Park Mi-Ra1,Song Jeong Won1,Shin Dong Hyeon2,Jung Sook-In2,Cho Duck1,Kee Seung Jung1,Shin Myung Geun1,Suh Soon Pal1,Ryang Dong Wook1

Affiliation:

1. Departments of Laboratory Medicine

2. Internal Medicine, Chonnam National University Medical School, Gwangju, Korea

Abstract

ABSTRACT We examined microevolution in a series of Candida albicans strains isolated from patients with catheter-related candidemia. Sixty-one isolates (29 from blood, 18 from catheters, 10 from urine, and 4 from other sites) were obtained from 15 patients who were admitted to the same hospital over a 3-year period. Isolates were analyzed by using Southern hybridization with the C1 fragment of Ca3 as a probe (C1 fingerprinting) and pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE). PFGE typing consisted of electrophoretic karyotyping (EK) and restriction endonuclease analysis of genomic DNA (REAG) by using SfiI (REAG-S) and BssHII (REAG-B). When catheter isolates were compared with blood isolates from the same patient, catheter isolates from 5 of 14 patients (36%) exhibited minor band differences (microevolution) relative to blood isolates in either C1 fingerprinting ( n = 4), REAG-S ( n = 3), or REAG-B ( n = 5) profiles, although they had identical EK patterns. However, the other sequential isolates from each patient, which had identical EK patterns, showed the same REAG and C1 fingerprinting patterns. Both fingerprinting methods revealed that two distinct genotypes were shared by isolates from seven patients in a neonatal intensive care unit, suggesting two nosocomial clusters. Except for two catheter isolates from the index patients of each cluster, no consecutive isolates collected from each of the two clusters showed any microevolution during the 2- or 7-month cluster periods. The findings suggest that in catheter-related candidemia, some C. albicans strains undergo microevolution during catheter colonization.

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

Subject

Microbiology (medical)

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