| Literature DB >> 30813287 |
Abstract
Onychomycosis is mainly caused by two dermatophyte species, Trichophyton rubrum and Trichophyton interdigitale. A study of nail invasion mechanisms revealed that the secreted subtilisin Sub6, which has never been detected under in vitro growth conditions, was the main protease secreted by T. rubrum and T. interdigitale during infection. In contrast, most of the proteases secreted during the digestion of keratin in vitro were not detected in infected nails. The hypothesis that proteases isolated from dermatophytes grown in a keratin medium are virulence factors is no longer supported. Non-dermatophyte fungi can also be infectious agents in nails. It is necessary to identify the infectious fungus in onychomycosis to prescribe adequate treatment, as moulds such as Fusarium spp. and Aspergillus spp. are insensitive to standard treatments with terbinafine or itraconazole, which are usually applied for dermatophytes. In these refractory cases, topical amphotericin B treatment has shown to be effective. Terbinafine treatment failure against dermatophytes is also possible, and is usually due to resistance caused by a missense mutation in the squalene epoxidase enzyme targeted by the drug. Trichophyton resistance to terbinafine treatment is an emerging problem, and a switch to azole-based treatment may be necessary to cure such cases of onychomycosis.Entities:
Keywords: Acremonium; Aspergillus; Fusarium; Trichophyton; amphotericin B; antifungal drug resistance; itraconazole; onychomycosis; terbinafine
Year: 2019 PMID: 30813287 PMCID: PMC6463057 DOI: 10.3390/jof5010020
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Fungi (Basel) ISSN: 2309-608X
Tools for the diagnosis of onychomycosis and rapid identification of the pathogen.
| Methods | Target | Usage § | Time | Specificity # | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Hyphae and spores in nails | PP, RL | 2–5 min | Fungi ( | [ |
|
| Growing fungi | RL | 7–14 days | Tru, Tint | [ |
|
| Nail fungal DNA | RL | 5 h | Tru | [ |
|
| Nail fungal DNA | RL | 24 h | [ | |
|
| Sub6 | RD | Tru, Tint | [ | |
|
| Sub6 | RD | 24 h |
| [ |
|
| Sub6 | ND | 24 h |
| [ |
|
| Polysaccharides | PP | 15 min |
| [ |
§ PP: usage in private practice; RL: usage in routine laboratory; RD: for research and development. # NDM: non-dermatophyte filamentous mould; Tru: T. rubrum; Tint: T. interdigitale.
Figure 1Direct mycological examinations using fluorescence microscopy showing hyphae in an infected nail. Bar: 20 μm.
Figure 2Efficacy of treatment with amphotericin B in topical application for NDM onychomycoses. (A) before treatment; (B) after treatment. The infectious agent identified by PCR was Fusarium sp. in patients 1 and 2, and Aspergillus oryzae in patients 3 and 4. Figure from Monod et al., Rev Med Suisse. 2013, 380:730-3, with permission of the Editor.