Microevolution of serial clinical isolates of Cryptococcus neoformans var. grubii and C. gattii
Chen, Y; Farrer, RA; Giamberardino, C; et al.Sakthikumar, S; Jones, A; Yang, T; Tenor, JL; Wagih, O; Van Wyk, M; Govender, NP; Mitchell, TG; Litvintseva, AP; Cuomo, CA; Perfect, JR
Date: 7 March 2017
Journal
mBio
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Publisher DOI
Abstract
The pathogenic species of Cryptococcus are a major cause of mortality
owing to severe infections in immunocompromised as well as immunocompetent individuals. Although antifungal treatment is usually effective, many patients relapse
after treatment, and in such cases, comparative analyses of the genomes of incident
and relapse isolates ...
The pathogenic species of Cryptococcus are a major cause of mortality
owing to severe infections in immunocompromised as well as immunocompetent individuals. Although antifungal treatment is usually effective, many patients relapse
after treatment, and in such cases, comparative analyses of the genomes of incident
and relapse isolates may reveal evidence of determinative, microevolutionary changes
within the host. Here, we analyzed serial isolates cultured from cerebrospinal fluid
specimens of 18 South African patients with recurrent cryptococcal meningitis. The
time between collection of the incident isolates and collection of the relapse isolates
ranged from 124 days to 290 days, and the analyses revealed that, during this period within the patients, the isolates underwent several genetic and phenotypic
changes. Considering the vast genetic diversity of cryptococcal isolates in subSaharan Africa, it was not surprising to find that the relapse isolates had acquired
different genetic and correlative phenotypic changes. They exhibited various mechanisms for enhancing virulence, such as growth at 39°C, adaptation to stress, and
capsule production; a remarkable amplification of ERG11 at the native and unlinked
locus may provide stable resistance to fluconazole. Our data provide a deeper understanding of the microevolution of Cryptococcus species under pressure from antifungal chemotherapy and host immune responses. This investigation clearly suggests a promising strategy to identify novel targets for improved diagnosis, therapy,
and prognosis.
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