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Differentiation of Candida albicans complex species isolated from invasive and non-invasive infections using HWP1 gene size polymorphism

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Taxonomy of Candida is controversial and has changed due to the investigation of the novel species. Candida africana and Candida dubliniensis are new members of the C. albicans complex that are currently gaining both clinical and epidemiologic significance. This study aimed t...

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Autores principales: Salehipour, Kourosh, Aboutalebian, Shima, Charsizadeh, Arezoo, Ahmadi, Bahram, Mirhendi, Hossein
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Iranian Society of Medical Mycology 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8740857/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35028483
http://dx.doi.org/10.18502/cmm.7.2.7034
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author Salehipour, Kourosh
Aboutalebian, Shima
Charsizadeh, Arezoo
Ahmadi, Bahram
Mirhendi, Hossein
author_facet Salehipour, Kourosh
Aboutalebian, Shima
Charsizadeh, Arezoo
Ahmadi, Bahram
Mirhendi, Hossein
author_sort Salehipour, Kourosh
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Taxonomy of Candida is controversial and has changed due to the investigation of the novel species. Candida africana and Candida dubliniensis are new members of the C. albicans complex that are currently gaining both clinical and epidemiologic significance. This study aimed to report the prevalence of C. africana among the strains isolated from patients using hyphal wall protein 1 (HWP1) gene size polymorphism. MATERIALS AND METHODS: In total, 235 yeasts confirmed as C. albicans complex based on chromogenic media and internal transcribed spacers sequencing isolated from various clinical forms of invasive and non-invasive candidiasis mainly candidemia were re-identified using HWP1 gene polymorphisms. The HWP1-polymerase chain reaction amplicons were re-confirmed by sequencing and BLAST analysis. RESULTS: Based on the HWP1 gene size polymorphism, 223 strains were identified as C. albicans (94.89%) from which 7 isolates produced two DNA fragments (850 and 941 bp). The C. dubliniensis (n=4, 1.7%), C. africana (n=1, 0.42%), and mix of C. albicans and C. africana (n=7, 2.97%) were also identified. CONCLUSION: It can be said that C. albicans remains the most common Candida species, while C. dubliniensis and C. africana are rarely found among the patient isolates. Due to limited information on the molecular epidemiology of this novel yeast, more studies using molecular methods are recommended.
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spelling pubmed-87408572022-01-12 Differentiation of Candida albicans complex species isolated from invasive and non-invasive infections using HWP1 gene size polymorphism Salehipour, Kourosh Aboutalebian, Shima Charsizadeh, Arezoo Ahmadi, Bahram Mirhendi, Hossein Curr Med Mycol Short Comminucation BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Taxonomy of Candida is controversial and has changed due to the investigation of the novel species. Candida africana and Candida dubliniensis are new members of the C. albicans complex that are currently gaining both clinical and epidemiologic significance. This study aimed to report the prevalence of C. africana among the strains isolated from patients using hyphal wall protein 1 (HWP1) gene size polymorphism. MATERIALS AND METHODS: In total, 235 yeasts confirmed as C. albicans complex based on chromogenic media and internal transcribed spacers sequencing isolated from various clinical forms of invasive and non-invasive candidiasis mainly candidemia were re-identified using HWP1 gene polymorphisms. The HWP1-polymerase chain reaction amplicons were re-confirmed by sequencing and BLAST analysis. RESULTS: Based on the HWP1 gene size polymorphism, 223 strains were identified as C. albicans (94.89%) from which 7 isolates produced two DNA fragments (850 and 941 bp). The C. dubliniensis (n=4, 1.7%), C. africana (n=1, 0.42%), and mix of C. albicans and C. africana (n=7, 2.97%) were also identified. CONCLUSION: It can be said that C. albicans remains the most common Candida species, while C. dubliniensis and C. africana are rarely found among the patient isolates. Due to limited information on the molecular epidemiology of this novel yeast, more studies using molecular methods are recommended. Iranian Society of Medical Mycology 2021-06 /pmc/articles/PMC8740857/ /pubmed/35028483 http://dx.doi.org/10.18502/cmm.7.2.7034 Text en Copyright: © 2021, Published by Mazandaran University of Medical Sciences on behalf of Iranian Society of Medical Mycology and Invasive Fungi Research Center. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 Unported License, ( http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) ) which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Short Comminucation
Salehipour, Kourosh
Aboutalebian, Shima
Charsizadeh, Arezoo
Ahmadi, Bahram
Mirhendi, Hossein
Differentiation of Candida albicans complex species isolated from invasive and non-invasive infections using HWP1 gene size polymorphism
title Differentiation of Candida albicans complex species isolated from invasive and non-invasive infections using HWP1 gene size polymorphism
title_full Differentiation of Candida albicans complex species isolated from invasive and non-invasive infections using HWP1 gene size polymorphism
title_fullStr Differentiation of Candida albicans complex species isolated from invasive and non-invasive infections using HWP1 gene size polymorphism
title_full_unstemmed Differentiation of Candida albicans complex species isolated from invasive and non-invasive infections using HWP1 gene size polymorphism
title_short Differentiation of Candida albicans complex species isolated from invasive and non-invasive infections using HWP1 gene size polymorphism
title_sort differentiation of candida albicans complex species isolated from invasive and non-invasive infections using hwp1 gene size polymorphism
topic Short Comminucation
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8740857/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35028483
http://dx.doi.org/10.18502/cmm.7.2.7034
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