Affiliation:
1. Aberdeen Fungal Group, School of Medical Sciences, University of Aberdeen, Aberdeen AB25 2ZD, United Kingdom
2. Institute of Microbiology, University of Lausanne and University Hospital Center, CH-1011 Lausanne, Switzerland
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Principal mechanisms of resistance to azole antifungals include the upregulation of multidrug transporters and the modification of the target enzyme, a cytochrome P450 (Erg11) involved in the 14α-demethylation of ergosterol. These mechanisms are often combined in azole-resistant
Candida albicans
isolates recovered from patients. However, the precise contributions of individual mechanisms to
C. albicans
resistance to specific azoles have been difficult to establish because of the technical difficulties in the genetic manipulation of this diploid species. Recent advances have made genetic manipulations easier, and we therefore undertook the genetic dissection of resistance mechanisms in an azole-resistant clinical isolate. This isolate (DSY296) upregulates the multidrug transporter genes
CDR1
and
CDR2
and has acquired a G464S substitution in both
ERG11
alleles. In DSY296, inactivation of
TAC1
, a transcription factor containing a gain-of-function mutation, followed by sequential replacement of
ERG11
mutant alleles with wild-type alleles, restored azole susceptibility to the levels measured for a parent azole-susceptible isolate (DSY294). These sequential genetic manipulations not only demonstrated that these two resistance mechanisms were those responsible for the development of resistance in DSY296 but also indicated that the quantitative level of resistance as measured
in vitro
by MIC determinations was a function of the number of genetic resistance mechanisms operating in any strain. The engineered strains were also tested for their responses to fluconazole treatment in a novel 3-day model of invasive
C. albicans
infection of mice. Fifty percent effective doses (ED
50
s) of fluconazole were highest for DSY296 and decreased proportionally with the sequential removal of each resistance mechanism. However, while the fold differences in ED
50
were proportional to the fold differences in MICs, their magnitude was lower than that measured
in vitro
and depended on the specific resistance mechanism operating.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Pharmacology (medical),Pharmacology
Cited by
95 articles.
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