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Sporothrix spp. Biofilms Impact in the Zoonotic Transmission Route: Feline Claws Associated Biofilms, Itraconazole Tolerance, and Potential Repurposing for Miltefosine

Sporotrichosis is the most prevalent subcutaneous mycosis globally, and it is typically caused by direct inoculation of the soil saprophytic fungus Sporothrix spp. into the patients’ skin. However, sporotrichosis has an important zoonotic transmission route between cats and humans in hot-spot endemi...

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Autores principales: dos Santos, Giulia Maria Pires, Borba-Santos, Luana Pereira, Vila, Taissa, Ferreira Gremião, Isabella Dib, Pereira, Sandro Antonio, De Souza, Wanderley, Rozental, Sonia
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8880041/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35215149
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/pathogens11020206
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author dos Santos, Giulia Maria Pires
Borba-Santos, Luana Pereira
Vila, Taissa
Ferreira Gremião, Isabella Dib
Pereira, Sandro Antonio
De Souza, Wanderley
Rozental, Sonia
author_facet dos Santos, Giulia Maria Pires
Borba-Santos, Luana Pereira
Vila, Taissa
Ferreira Gremião, Isabella Dib
Pereira, Sandro Antonio
De Souza, Wanderley
Rozental, Sonia
author_sort dos Santos, Giulia Maria Pires
collection PubMed
description Sporotrichosis is the most prevalent subcutaneous mycosis globally, and it is typically caused by direct inoculation of the soil saprophytic fungus Sporothrix spp. into the patients’ skin. However, sporotrichosis has an important zoonotic transmission route between cats and humans in hot-spot endemic areas such as Brazil. Antifungal itraconazole is the first-line treatment; however, it is frequently associated with recurrence after withdrawal, mainly on cats. Biofilms are important resistance structures related to the environmental persistence of most microorganisms. In the present work, we evaluated Sporothrix yeasts’ ability to form biofilms in an ex vivo model of infected claws of cats. Using scanning electron microscopy, we demonstrated the presence of fungal biofilms in the claws of cats diagnosed with sporotrichosis confirmed by isolation of Sporothrix spp. in culture. We present here evidence of antibiofilm activity of miltefosine and suggest its use off-label as an antifungal as a putative alternative to itraconazole against Sporothrix biofilms. Claw contamination could sustain infections through a continuous inoculation cycle between open lesions and cat claws. Our results further support the off-label use of miltefosine as a promising alternative, especially for mycosis refractory to conventional treatment.
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spelling pubmed-88800412022-02-26 Sporothrix spp. Biofilms Impact in the Zoonotic Transmission Route: Feline Claws Associated Biofilms, Itraconazole Tolerance, and Potential Repurposing for Miltefosine dos Santos, Giulia Maria Pires Borba-Santos, Luana Pereira Vila, Taissa Ferreira Gremião, Isabella Dib Pereira, Sandro Antonio De Souza, Wanderley Rozental, Sonia Pathogens Article Sporotrichosis is the most prevalent subcutaneous mycosis globally, and it is typically caused by direct inoculation of the soil saprophytic fungus Sporothrix spp. into the patients’ skin. However, sporotrichosis has an important zoonotic transmission route between cats and humans in hot-spot endemic areas such as Brazil. Antifungal itraconazole is the first-line treatment; however, it is frequently associated with recurrence after withdrawal, mainly on cats. Biofilms are important resistance structures related to the environmental persistence of most microorganisms. In the present work, we evaluated Sporothrix yeasts’ ability to form biofilms in an ex vivo model of infected claws of cats. Using scanning electron microscopy, we demonstrated the presence of fungal biofilms in the claws of cats diagnosed with sporotrichosis confirmed by isolation of Sporothrix spp. in culture. We present here evidence of antibiofilm activity of miltefosine and suggest its use off-label as an antifungal as a putative alternative to itraconazole against Sporothrix biofilms. Claw contamination could sustain infections through a continuous inoculation cycle between open lesions and cat claws. Our results further support the off-label use of miltefosine as a promising alternative, especially for mycosis refractory to conventional treatment. MDPI 2022-02-03 /pmc/articles/PMC8880041/ /pubmed/35215149 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/pathogens11020206 Text en © 2022 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
dos Santos, Giulia Maria Pires
Borba-Santos, Luana Pereira
Vila, Taissa
Ferreira Gremião, Isabella Dib
Pereira, Sandro Antonio
De Souza, Wanderley
Rozental, Sonia
Sporothrix spp. Biofilms Impact in the Zoonotic Transmission Route: Feline Claws Associated Biofilms, Itraconazole Tolerance, and Potential Repurposing for Miltefosine
title Sporothrix spp. Biofilms Impact in the Zoonotic Transmission Route: Feline Claws Associated Biofilms, Itraconazole Tolerance, and Potential Repurposing for Miltefosine
title_full Sporothrix spp. Biofilms Impact in the Zoonotic Transmission Route: Feline Claws Associated Biofilms, Itraconazole Tolerance, and Potential Repurposing for Miltefosine
title_fullStr Sporothrix spp. Biofilms Impact in the Zoonotic Transmission Route: Feline Claws Associated Biofilms, Itraconazole Tolerance, and Potential Repurposing for Miltefosine
title_full_unstemmed Sporothrix spp. Biofilms Impact in the Zoonotic Transmission Route: Feline Claws Associated Biofilms, Itraconazole Tolerance, and Potential Repurposing for Miltefosine
title_short Sporothrix spp. Biofilms Impact in the Zoonotic Transmission Route: Feline Claws Associated Biofilms, Itraconazole Tolerance, and Potential Repurposing for Miltefosine
title_sort sporothrix spp. biofilms impact in the zoonotic transmission route: feline claws associated biofilms, itraconazole tolerance, and potential repurposing for miltefosine
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8880041/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35215149
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/pathogens11020206
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