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Candida species and oral mycobiota of patients clinically diagnosed with oral thrush

Overgrowth of Candida yeasts in the oral cavity may result in the development of oral thrush in immunocompromised individuals. This study analyzed the diversity and richness of the oral mycobiota of patients clinically diagnosed with oral thrush (OT), follow-up of oral thrush patients after antifung...

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Autores principales: Karajacob, Alexandria Sonia, Azizan, Nuramirah Binti, Al-Maleki, Anis Rageh Mohammad, Goh, Joanne Pei En, Loke, Mun Fai, Khor, Hui Min, Ho, Gwo Fuang, Ponnampalavanar, Sasheela, Tay, Sun Tee
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10109505/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37068057
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0284043
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author Karajacob, Alexandria Sonia
Azizan, Nuramirah Binti
Al-Maleki, Anis Rageh Mohammad
Goh, Joanne Pei En
Loke, Mun Fai
Khor, Hui Min
Ho, Gwo Fuang
Ponnampalavanar, Sasheela
Tay, Sun Tee
author_facet Karajacob, Alexandria Sonia
Azizan, Nuramirah Binti
Al-Maleki, Anis Rageh Mohammad
Goh, Joanne Pei En
Loke, Mun Fai
Khor, Hui Min
Ho, Gwo Fuang
Ponnampalavanar, Sasheela
Tay, Sun Tee
author_sort Karajacob, Alexandria Sonia
collection PubMed
description Overgrowth of Candida yeasts in the oral cavity may result in the development of oral thrush in immunocompromised individuals. This study analyzed the diversity and richness of the oral mycobiota of patients clinically diagnosed with oral thrush (OT), follow-up of oral thrush patients after antifungal therapy (AT), and healthy controls (HC). Oral rinse and oral swab samples were collected from 38 OT patients, 21 AT patients, and 41 healthy individuals (HC). Pellet from the oral rinse and oral swab were used for the isolation of oral Candida yeasts on Brilliance Candida Agar followed by molecular speciation. ITS1 amplicon sequencing using Illumina MiSeq was performed on DNA extracted from the oral rinse pellet of 16 OT, 7 AT, and 7 HC oral rinse samples. Trimmed sequence data were taxonomically grouped and analyzed using the CLC Microbial Genomics Module workflow. Candida yeasts were isolated at significantly higher rates from oral rinse and swab samples of OT (68.4%, p < 0.001) and AT (61.9%, p = 0.012) patients, as compared to HC (26.8%). Predominance of Candida albicans specifically, was noted in OT (60.5%, p < 0.001) and AT (42.9%, p = 0.006) vs. HC (9.8%), while non-albicans Candida species was dominant in HC. Analysis of oral mycobiota from OT patients showed the presence of 8 phyla, 222 genera, and 309 fungal species. Low alpha diversity (Shannon index, p = 0.006; Chao-1 biased corrected index, p = 0.01), varied beta diversity (Bray-Curtis, p = 0.01986; Jaccard, p = 0.02766; Weighted UniFrac, p = 0.00528), and increased relative abundance of C. albicans (p = 3.18E-02) was significantly associated with the oral mycobiota of OT vs. HC. This study supported that C. albicans is the main etiological agent in oral thrush and highlights the association of fungal biodiversity with the pathophysiology of oral thrush.
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spelling pubmed-101095052023-04-18 Candida species and oral mycobiota of patients clinically diagnosed with oral thrush Karajacob, Alexandria Sonia Azizan, Nuramirah Binti Al-Maleki, Anis Rageh Mohammad Goh, Joanne Pei En Loke, Mun Fai Khor, Hui Min Ho, Gwo Fuang Ponnampalavanar, Sasheela Tay, Sun Tee PLoS One Research Article Overgrowth of Candida yeasts in the oral cavity may result in the development of oral thrush in immunocompromised individuals. This study analyzed the diversity and richness of the oral mycobiota of patients clinically diagnosed with oral thrush (OT), follow-up of oral thrush patients after antifungal therapy (AT), and healthy controls (HC). Oral rinse and oral swab samples were collected from 38 OT patients, 21 AT patients, and 41 healthy individuals (HC). Pellet from the oral rinse and oral swab were used for the isolation of oral Candida yeasts on Brilliance Candida Agar followed by molecular speciation. ITS1 amplicon sequencing using Illumina MiSeq was performed on DNA extracted from the oral rinse pellet of 16 OT, 7 AT, and 7 HC oral rinse samples. Trimmed sequence data were taxonomically grouped and analyzed using the CLC Microbial Genomics Module workflow. Candida yeasts were isolated at significantly higher rates from oral rinse and swab samples of OT (68.4%, p < 0.001) and AT (61.9%, p = 0.012) patients, as compared to HC (26.8%). Predominance of Candida albicans specifically, was noted in OT (60.5%, p < 0.001) and AT (42.9%, p = 0.006) vs. HC (9.8%), while non-albicans Candida species was dominant in HC. Analysis of oral mycobiota from OT patients showed the presence of 8 phyla, 222 genera, and 309 fungal species. Low alpha diversity (Shannon index, p = 0.006; Chao-1 biased corrected index, p = 0.01), varied beta diversity (Bray-Curtis, p = 0.01986; Jaccard, p = 0.02766; Weighted UniFrac, p = 0.00528), and increased relative abundance of C. albicans (p = 3.18E-02) was significantly associated with the oral mycobiota of OT vs. HC. This study supported that C. albicans is the main etiological agent in oral thrush and highlights the association of fungal biodiversity with the pathophysiology of oral thrush. Public Library of Science 2023-04-17 /pmc/articles/PMC10109505/ /pubmed/37068057 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0284043 Text en © 2023 Karajacob et al https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Karajacob, Alexandria Sonia
Azizan, Nuramirah Binti
Al-Maleki, Anis Rageh Mohammad
Goh, Joanne Pei En
Loke, Mun Fai
Khor, Hui Min
Ho, Gwo Fuang
Ponnampalavanar, Sasheela
Tay, Sun Tee
Candida species and oral mycobiota of patients clinically diagnosed with oral thrush
title Candida species and oral mycobiota of patients clinically diagnosed with oral thrush
title_full Candida species and oral mycobiota of patients clinically diagnosed with oral thrush
title_fullStr Candida species and oral mycobiota of patients clinically diagnosed with oral thrush
title_full_unstemmed Candida species and oral mycobiota of patients clinically diagnosed with oral thrush
title_short Candida species and oral mycobiota of patients clinically diagnosed with oral thrush
title_sort candida species and oral mycobiota of patients clinically diagnosed with oral thrush
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10109505/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37068057
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0284043
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