| Literature DB >> 29371527 |
Sónia Silva1, Célia F Rodrigues2, Daniela Araújo3, Maria Elisa Rodrigues4, Mariana Henriques5.
Abstract
Candida infections (candidiasis) are the most prevalent opportunistic fungal infection on humans and, as such, a major public health problem. In recent decades, candidiasis has been associated to Candida species other than Candida albicans. Moreover, biofilms have been considered the most prevalent growth form of Candida cells and a strong causative agent of the intensification of antifungal resistance. As yet, no specific resistance factor has been identified as the sole responsible for the increased recalcitrance to antifungal agents exhibited by biofilms. Instead, biofilm antifungal resistance is a complex multifactorial phenomenon, which still remains to be fully elucidated and understood. The different mechanisms, which may be responsible for the intrinsic resistance of Candida species biofilms, include the high density of cells within the biofilm, the growth and nutrient limitation, the effects of the biofilm matrix, the presence of persister cells, the antifungal resistance gene expression and the increase of sterols on the membrane of biofilm cells. Thus, this review intends to provide information on the recent advances about Candida species biofilm antifungal resistance and its implication on intensification of the candidiasis.Entities:
Keywords: biofilm; candidiasis; mechanisms; resistance
Year: 2017 PMID: 29371527 PMCID: PMC5715972 DOI: 10.3390/jof3010008
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Fungi (Basel) ISSN: 2309-608X
Characteristics of the most common Candida species biofilms.
| Biofilm Forming Capacity | Biofilm Characteristics | Refs. | |
|---|---|---|---|
| +++++ | Basal blastospore layer with a dense overlying matrix composed of exopolysaccharides and hyphae. | [ | |
| ++/+++ | Chains of cells with thin extracellular matrix material. | [ | |
| Hhigh variability among clinical isolates. | |||
| ++/+++ | Forms considerably less biofilm than
| [ | |
| High in both protein and carbohydrate content. | |||
| ++++ | Thick multilayered biofilm of pseudohyphal forms embedded within the polymer matrix. | [ | |
| +++ | Clumped blastospores and less volume. | [ | |
| Large amounts of carbohydrate with less protein. | |||
| High variability among clinical isolates. | |||
| +++ | Chains of cells with thin, but large, amounts of extracellular matrix material. | [ | |
| Low amounts of carbohydrate and protein. |
+++ Normal to high; ++++ High; +++++ Very high biofilm formers.
Localization, condition/disease and most common species found on several Candida biofilms.
| Biofilm | Condition/Disease | Most Common
| Refs. |
|---|---|---|---|
| Medical Devices | Endocarditis | [ | |
| Total parenteral nutrition | |||
| Prosthetic joints | |||
| Peritoneal dialysis | |||
| Cannulation | |||
| Ventriculoperitoneal shunts | |||
| Prosthetic knees | |||
| Hip joints | |||
| Breast implants | |||
| Bioprosthetic heart valves | |||
| Catheter-related disease: urinary catheter, central venous catheter, intravenous catheter | |||
| Oral | Caries | [ | |
| Periodontal disease | |||
| Endodontic infection | |||
| Several mucosal infections | |||
| Gastrointestinal (GI) and Urinary Tract | Feeding tubes for enteral nutrition | [ | |
| Ulcerative colitis | |||
| GI candidiasis | |||
| Pyelonephritis | |||
| Cystitis | |||
| Prostatitis | |||
| Intrauterine contraceptives | |||
| Upper Airways | Rhinosinusitis | [ | |
| Ventilator-associated | |||
| Pneumonia | |||
| Lower Airways | Cystic Fibrosis | [ | |
| Allergic bronchopulmonary diseases | |||
| Wounds | Diabetic foot ulcer | [ | |
| Non-healing surgical wounds | |||
| Chronic wound infections | |||
| Pressure ulcers | |||
| Venous leg ulcers |
Figure 1General scheme of the mechanisms described as involved on Candida species biofilm resistance.