Affiliation:
1. Departamento de Microbiologı́a-Parasitologı́a, Facultad de Medicina, UNAM,1
2. Departamento de Infectologı́a del Instituto Nacional de la Nutrición, “Salvador Zubirán”, SS,2 and
3. Departamento de Microbiologı́a, Escuela Nacional de Ciencias Biológicas, IPN,3 Mexico City, Mexico
Abstract
ABSTRACT
The present paper analyzes the histoplasmin electrophoretic profiles and the randomly amplified polymorphic DNA (RAPD) patterns of the fungus
Histoplasma capsulatum
isolated from Mexican patients with AIDS-associated histoplasmosis. Clinical isolates from Guatemala, Colombia, and Panama, as well as
H. capsulatum
isolates from different sources in nature, were also processed. All histoplasmin samples shared four antigenic fractions of 200, 49, 10.5, and 8.5 kDa in sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE). According to their percentage of relatedness, based on SDS-PAGE histoplasmin electrophoretic image analysis,
H. capsulatum
isolates were divided in two groups: group A contained all AIDS-associated isolates studied and two human reference strains from Mexican histoplasmosis patients without AIDS; group B included bat guano, infected bat, and cock excreta isolates from the State of Guerrero, Mexico, plus three human histoplasmosis strains from Guatemala, Panama, and Colombia. Polymorphic DNA patterns evaluated by RAPD-PCR showed three major bands of 4.4, 3.2, and 2.3 kb in most
H. capsulatum
isolates studied. Four groups were related by DNA polymorphisms: group I was formed by most of the AIDS-associated
H. capsulatum
isolates studied, one human histoplasmosis strain from Colombia, two human reference strains from Mexican patients without AIDS, and one human histoplasmosis strain from Guatemala. Group II consisted of only a single strain from Panama. Group III included three strains: one from a Mexican patient with AIDS and two isolated from nature in Guerrero (cock excreta and bat guano). The last, group IV, consisted of only one strain isolated from an infected bat, captured in Guerrero. A tight relationship between phenotypic and genotypic characterization was observed, and both analyses could be useful tools for typing
H. capsulatum
from different sources and geographic origins.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology