| Literature DB >> 10517593 |
Jan Schmid1, Scott Herd1, Paul R Hunter2, Richard D Cannon3, M Salleh M Yasin4, Shamin Samad4, Mary Carr5, Dinah Parr6, Wendy McKinney6, Mona Schousboe7, Ben Harris7, Rosemary Ikram8, Mike Harris8, Angela Restrepo9, Guillermo Hoyos9, Kumar P Singh10.
Abstract
Epidemiological studies, using the probe Ca3, have shown that in a given patient population a single cluster of genetically related Candida albicans isolates usually predominates. The authors have investigated whether these local clusters are part of a single group, geographically widespread and highly prevalent as an aetiological agent of various types of candidiasis. An unrooted neighbour-joining tree of 266 infection-causing C. albicans isolates (each from a different individual) from 12 geographical regions in 6 countries was created, based on genetic distances generated by Ca3 fingerprinting. Thirty-seven per cent of all isolates formed a single genetically homogeneous cluster (cluster A). The remainder of isolates were genetically diverse. Using the maximum branch length within cluster A as a cut-off, they could be divided into 37 groups, whose prevalence ranged between 0.3% and 9%. Strains from cluster A were highly prevalent in all but one geographical region, with a mean prevalence across all regions of 41%. When isolates were separated into groups based on patient characteristics or type of infection, strains from cluster A had a prevalence exceeding 27% in each group, and their mean prevalence was 43% across all patient characteristics. These data provide evidence that cluster A constitutes a general-purpose genotype, which is geographically widespread and acts as a predominant aetiological agent of all forms of candidiasis in all categories of patients surveyed.Entities:
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Year: 1999 PMID: 10517593 DOI: 10.1099/00221287-145-9-2405
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Microbiology ISSN: 1350-0872 Impact factor: 2.777