Affiliation:
1. Schering Plough Research Institute, 2015 Galloping Hill Road, K15-4-4700, Kenilworth, New Jersey 07033
2. Department of Microbiology-Infectious Diseases, Hospital Maisonneuve-Rosemont, Montreal, Quebec, Canada
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Two clinical
Candida albicans
isolates that exhibited high-level resistance to azoles and modest decreases in susceptibility to amphotericin B were cultured from unrelated patients. Both isolates harbored homozygous nonsense mutations in
ERG3
, which encodes an enzyme, sterol Δ
5,6
-desaturase, involved in ergosterol synthesis. Extraction and analysis of the sterols from both isolates confirmed the absence of sterol Δ
5,6
-desaturase activity. Although the loss of sterol Δ
5,6
-desaturase activity is known to confer resistance to azoles, this mechanism of resistance has rarely been seen in clinical isolates, suggesting that such mutants are at a competitive disadvantage. To test this hypothesis, the virulence of the
erg3
mutants was assayed by using a mouse systemic infection model. The mutants were significantly less virulent than the wild-type comparator strains. However, the kidney fungal burdens in mice infected with the
erg3
mutants were similar to those in mice infected with the wild-type strains. Similar results were obtained by using a laboratory-generated homozygous
erg3
deletion mutant (D. Sanglard et al., Antimicrob. Agents Chemother. 47:2404-2412, 2003). Reintroduction of a wild-type
ERG3
allele into the homozygous deletion mutant restored virulence, ergosterol synthesis, and susceptibility to azoles, confirming that these phenotypic changes were solely due to the inactivation of Erg3p.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Pharmacology (medical),Pharmacology
Cited by
61 articles.
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