Literature DB >> 16054328

Incubation at room temperature may be an independent factor that induces chlamydospore production in Candida dubliniensis.

Banu Sancak1, Sule Colakoglu, Ziya Cibali Acikgoz, Sevtap Arikan.   

Abstract

Production of chlamydospores is one of the phenotypic features used to differentiate Candida albicans and Candida dubliniensis. C. albicans produces few chlamydospores on only cornmeal/rice-Tween agar at room temperature, whereas C. dubliniensis produces abundant chlamydospores at this temperature both on cornmeal agar and some other commonly used media. We tried to determine whether the room temperature is the main factor that induces chlamydospore production of C. dubliniensis, regardless of the medium used. For this purpose, 100 C. albicans and 24 C. dubliniensis isolates were tested for chlamydospore production at room temperature and at 37 degrees C on some routinely used media, including eosin-methylene blue agar (EMB), nutrient agar (NA), nutrient broth (NB), and also on an investigational medium, phenol red agar (PR). At 37 degrees C, none of the isolates produced chlamydospores on any of the tested media. At 26 degrees C, all C. dubliniensis isolates produced abundant chlamydospores and pseudohyphae after 24-48 h on all tested media. At this incubation temperature, all C. albicans isolates failed to produce chlamydospores and pseudohyphae on EMB, NA, and NB, whereas 2 of the C. albicans isolates produced a few chlamydospores on PR. We also observed that all C. dubliniensis isolates tested on EMB and PR produced rough colonies with a hyphal fringe around the colonies, whereas none of the C. albicans isolates showed this property. In conclusion, incubation at 26 degrees C may play the key role for production of abundant chlamydospores and pseudohyphae by C. dubliniensis. Comprehensive molecular studies are needed to clarify the genetic basis of this observation. Using EMB and PR may be an inexpensive, a time-saving, and a simple way of presumptive identification of C. dubliniensis based on chlamydospore formation and colony morphology.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 16054328     DOI: 10.1016/j.diagmicrobio.2005.04.014

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Diagn Microbiol Infect Dis        ISSN: 0732-8893            Impact factor:   2.803


  2 in total

1.  Comparison of duplex PCR and phenotypic analysis in differentiating Candida dubliniensis from Candida albicans from oral samples.

Authors:  Asanga Sampath; Manjula Weerasekera; Ayomi Dilhari; Chinthika Gunasekara; Uditha Bulugahapitiya; Neluka Fernando; Lakshman Samaranayake
Journal:  AMB Express       Date:  2017-06-27       Impact factor: 3.298

2.  Identification of genes related to chlamydospore formation in Clonostachys rosea 67-1.

Authors:  Zhan-Bin Sun; Jun Zhang; Man-Hong Sun; Shi-Dong Li
Journal:  Microbiologyopen       Date:  2018-04-10       Impact factor: 3.139

  2 in total

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