Affiliation:
1. Institut Pasteur, Centre National de Référence Mycologie et Antifongiques, Unité de Mycologie Moléculaire, CNRS URA3012, 75724 Paris Cedex 15
2. Université Paris Descartes, Faculté de Médecine, AP-HP, Hôpital Européen Georges Pompidou, Unité de Parasitologie-Mycologie, 75015 Paris, France
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Mutations in two specific regions of the Fks1 subunit of 1,3-β-
d
-glucan synthase are known to confer decreased caspofungin susceptibility on
Candida
spp. Clinical isolates of
Candida
spp. (404
Candida albicans
, 62
C. tropicalis
, and 21
C. krusei
isolates) sent to the French National Reference Center were prospectively screened for susceptibility to caspofungin in vitro by the broth microdilution reference method of the Antifungal Susceptibility Testing Subcommittee of the European Committee on Antibiotic Susceptibility Testing (AFST-EUCAST). Twenty-eight isolates (25
C. albicans
, 2
C. tropicalis
, and 1
C. krusei
isolate) for which the caspofungin MIC was above the MIC that inhibited 90% of the isolates of the corresponding species (MIC
90
) were subjected to molecular analysis in order to identify mutations in the
fks1
gene. Substitutions in the deduced protein sequence of Fks1 were found for 8 isolates, and 20 isolates had the wild-type sequence. Among the six
C. albicans
isolates harboring mutations, six patterns were observed involving amino acid changes at positions 641, 645, 649, and 1358. For
C. tropicalis
, one isolate showed an L644W mutation, and for one
C. krusei
isolate, two mutations, L658W and L701M, were found. Two media, RPMI medium and AM3, were tested for their abilities to distinguish between isolates with wild-type Fks1 and those with mutant Fks1. In RPMI medium, caspofungin MICs ranged from 0.25 to 2 μg/ml for wild-type isolates and from 1 to 8 μg/ml for mutant isolates. A sharper difference was observed in AM3: all wild-type isolates were inhibited by 0.25 μg/ml of caspofungin, while caspofungin MICs for all mutant isolates were ≥0.5 μg/ml. These data demonstrate that clinical isolates of
C. albicans
,
C. tropicalis
, and
C. krusei
with decreased susceptibility to caspofungin in vitro have diverse mutations in the
fks1
gene and that AM3 is potentially a better medium than RPMI for distinguishing between mutant and wild-type isolates using the AFST-EUCAST method.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Pharmacology (medical),Pharmacology
Cited by
120 articles.
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