Affiliation:
1. Department of Oral Medicine1 and
2. Department of Oral and Craniofacial Biological Sciences,2 Dental School, University of Maryland, Baltimore, and
3. Department of Pathology, The Johns Hopkins University,3Baltimore, Maryland
Abstract
ABSTRACT
The binding of microorganisms to each other and oral surfaces contributes to the progression of microbial infections in the oral cavity.
Candida dubliniensis
, a newly characterized species, has been identified in human immunodeficiency virus-seropositive patients and other immunocompromised individuals.
C. dubliniensis
phenotypically resembles
Candida albicans
in many respects yet can be identified and differentiated as a unique
Candida
species by phenotypic and genetic profiles. The purpose of this study was to determine oral coaggregation (CoAg) partners of
C. dubliniensis
and to compare these findings with CoAg of
C. albicans
under the same environmental conditions. Fifteen isolates of
C. dubliniensis
and 40 isolates of
C. albicans
were tested for their ability to coaggregate with strains of
Fusobacterium nucleatum
,
Peptostreptococcus micros
,
Peptostreptococcus magnus
,
Peptostreptococcus anaerobius
,
Porphyromonas gingivalis
, and
Prevotella intermedia
. When
C. dubliniensis
and
C. albicans
strains were grown at 37°C on Sabouraud dextrose agar, only
C. dubliniensis
strains coaggregated with
F. nucleatum
ATCC 49256 and no
C. albicans
strains showed CoAg. However, when the
C. dubliniensis
and
C. albicans
strains were grown at 25 or 45°C, both
C. dubliniensis
and
C. albicans
strains demonstrated CoAg with
F. nucleatum
. Heating the
C. albicans
strains (grown at 37°C) at 85°C for 30 min or treating them with dithiothreitol allowed the
C. albicans
strains grown at 37°C to coaggregate with
F. nucleatum
. CoAg at all growth temperatures was inhibited by mannose and α-methyl mannoside but not by EDTA or arginine. The CoAg reaction between
F. nucleatum
and the
Candida
species involved a heat-labile component on
F. nucleatum
and a mannan-containing heat-stable receptor on the
Candida
species. The CoAg reactions between
F. nucleatum
and the
Candida
species may be important in the colonization of the yeast in the oral cavity, and the CoAg of
C. dubliniensis
by
F. nucleatum
when grown at 37°C provides a rapid, specific, and inexpensive means to differentiate
C. dubliniensis
from
C. albicans
isolates in the clinical laboratory.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Cited by
72 articles.
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