| Literature DB >> 36068831 |
Manuela Gómez-Gaviria1, Héctor M Mora-Montes1, Diana F Mendoza-Reyes1.
Abstract
The incidence of fungal infections is increasing at an alarming rate and has posed a great challenge for science in recent years. The rise in these infections has been related to the increase in immunocompromised patients and the resistance of different species to antifungal drugs. Infections caused by the different Candida species, especially Candida albicans, are one of the most common mycoses in humans, and the etiological agents are considered opportunistic pathogens associated with high mortality rates when disseminated infections occur. Candida lusitaniae is considered an emerging opportunistic pathogen that most frequently affects immunocompromised patients with some comorbidity. Although it is a low-frequency pathogen, and the mortality rate of C. lusitaniae-caused candidemia does not exceed 5%, some isolates are known to be resistant to antifungals such as amphotericin B, 5-fluorocytosine, and fluconazole. In this paper, a detailed review of the current literature on this organism and its different aspects, such as its biology, possible virulence factors, pathogen-host interaction, diagnosis, and treatment of infection, is provided. Of particular interest, through Blastp analysis we predicted possible virulence factors in this species.Entities:
Keywords: biological aspects; candidiasis; multidrug resistance; opportunistic pathogens; virulence factors
Year: 2022 PMID: 36068831 PMCID: PMC9441179 DOI: 10.2147/IDR.S383785
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Infect Drug Resist ISSN: 1178-6973 Impact factor: 4.177
Prediction of the Most Important Virulence Factors in Candida lusitaniae
| Virulence Factor | E- value | Similarity (%) | Putative Role | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Als1-7 and Als9 | CLUG_03274 | 1e−46 | 47 | Adherence of the organism to the oral mucosa. | |
| Ecm33 | FOB63_002672 | 2e−150 | 75 | Contributes to the integrity of the fungal cell wall. | |
| Iff4 | FOB63_003688 | 4e−27 | 47 | Involved in cell wall organization, hyphal growth, as well as in host-fungus interaction. | |
| Mp65 | FOB63_004871 | 4e−119 | 78 | Cell surface mannoprotein involved in cell wall glucan metabolism and adhesion. | |
| Bcr1 | A9F13_15g00066 | 1e−39 | 87 | Acts as a master regulator of biofilm formation. | |
| Brg1 | CLUG_05535 | 3e−47 | 61 | Necessary for hyphal growth and biofilm formation. | |
| Efg1 | A9F13_02g02442 | 2e−91 | 87 | Transcriptional regulator required for filamentation. | |
| Hsp90 | A9F13_09g00462 | 0.0 | 95 | Regulates several signal transduction pathways and temperature-induced morphogenesis; localizes to the surface of hyphae. | |
| Ndt80 | FOB63_000392 | 3e−81 | 55 | Necessary for hyphal growth and biofilm formation. | |
| Rob1 | E0198_003579 | 1e−20 | 45 | Transcription factor involved in biofilm formation. | |
| Zap1 | CLUG_02564 | 7e−130 | 52 | Negatively regulates the biofilm matrix production. | |
| Cph1 | CLUG_02576 | 1e−119 | 60 | A transcriptional regulator with a key role in controlling filamentous growth. | |
| Hgc1 | CLUG_00968 | 7e−117 | 68 | Essential for hyphal morphogenesis | |
| Nrg1 | A9F13_05g02552 | 2e−32 | 82 | Necessary for filamentation and virulence. | |
| Tup1 | A9F13_01g07271 | 0.0 | 85 | Prevents filamentous growth in the absence of appropriate signals. | |
| Hgt1 | E0198_001093 | 0.0 | 81 | Plays a non-canonical role by down-modulating phagocytosis and killing by human neutrophils. | |
| Msb2 | A9F13_12g01265 | 1e−71 | 57 | Signaling mucin that allows fungi survival and growth in the infected human host. | |
| Pra1 | No found | - | - | Encodes for an antigen associated with the cell wall, known as a fibrinogen binding protein. | |
| Lip5-8 | EJF14_20550 | 3e−139 | 62 | Required for virulence in different infection models. | |
| Sap1-3 | EJF14_50044 | 3e−45 | 49 | Necessary for active penetration of host cells, neutrophil extracellular traps (NETs)-releasing response. Required for proteolysis. | |
| Plb1-5 | CLUG_01525 | 0.0 | 68 | Important for host cell penetration and virulence in a mouse model of systemic infection. | |
| Hsp60 | CLUG_00619 | 0.0 | 96 | Acts as an immunogenic trigger in orchestrating | |
| Hsp104 | CLUG_01501 | 0.0 | 90 | Pro-survival mediator in response to increasing temperature. | |
| Ssa1 | CLUG_01400 | 0.0 | 94 | Acts as invasin, facilitating host cell endocytosis. |
Notes: *Protein names are the accession codes of the sequences at the National Center for Biotechnology Information database (). The putative protein sequence encoded by the C. albicans gene was subjected to a standard protein BLAST analysis at . The best hit is reported in the C. lusitaniae Protein column, and this was scored with the lowest E value. The similarity column refers to the comparison of amino acid sequences from the C. albicans encoded protein and the best hit.
Figure 1Schematic representation of the phylogenetic relationship between species of the Candida CTG clade. The species C. rugosa, C lusitaniae, C guilliermondii, C famata, C parapsilosis, C tropicalis, C dubliniensis and C. albicans are part of the CTG clade of Candida. (٭) represents the species of our interest, C lusitaniae, and C. guilliermondii, which are phylogenetically closer to each other. The lengths of the branches are arbitrary.