Affiliation:
1. Mycology Unit, Medical School and Institut d'Investigació Sanitària Pere Virgili, Universitat Rovira i Virgili, Reus, Spain
2. Fungus Testing Laboratory, University of Texas Health Science Center, San Antonio, Texas
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Several members of the order
Mucorales
(subphylum
Mucoromycotina
) are important agents of severe human infections. The identification of these fungi by using standard mycologic methods is often difficult and time consuming. Frequently, the etiological agent in clinical cases is reported either as a
Mucor
sp., which is not the most frequent genus of zygomycetes, or only as a member of the
Mucorales
. For this reason, the actual spectrum of species of zygomycetes and their incidences in the clinical setting is not well known. The goals of this study were to compare the results of the molecular identification of an important set of clinical isolates, received in a mycological reference center from different regions of the United States, with those obtained by using the traditional morphological methods and to determine the spectrum of species involved. We tested 190 isolates morphologically identified as zygomycetes by using sequencing of the internal transcribed spacer (ITS) region of the ribosomal DNA. Molecular identification revealed that
Rhizopus oryzae
represented approximately half (44.7%) of these isolates. The remainder was identified as
Rhizopus microsporus
(22.1%),
Mucor circinelloides
(9.5%),
Mycocladus corymbifer
(formerly
Absidia corymbifera
) (5.3%),
Rhizomucor pusillus
(3.7%),
Cunninghamella bertholletiae
(3.2%),
Mucor indicus
(2.6%),
Cunninghamella echinulata
(1%), and
Apophysomyces elegans
(0.5%). The most common anatomic sites for clinically significant zygomycetes, as determined by isolates sent to the Fungus Testing Laboratory for identification and/or susceptibility testing and included in this study, were the sinuses, lungs, and various cutaneous locations, at 25.8%, 26.8%, and 28%, respectively. These sites represented approximately 80% of the isolates evaluated. A high level of correlation (92.6%) between morphological and molecular identifications was found.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Cited by
143 articles.
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