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Systemic Candidiasis (systemic + candidiasis)
Selected AbstractsSuppression of splenic macrophage Candida albicans phagocytosis following in vivo depletion of natural killer cells in immunocompetent BALB/c mice and T-cell-deficient nude miceFEMS IMMUNOLOGY & MEDICAL MICROBIOLOGY, Issue 3 2002I Algarra Abstract The resistance of mice to systemic infections caused by Candida albicans is associated with activated splenic macrophages. In addition, there is a correlation between natural killer (NK) cell activation and the resistance to systemic candidiasis. The present study was designed to clarify the role of NK cells in the control of splenic macrophage C. albicans phagocytosis by either depleting NK cells (anti-asialo GM1 treatment) or maintaining them in an activated state (tilorone treatment) in both immunocompetent BALB/c mice and T-cell-deficient nude mice. The results of the in vitro phagocytosis assays were analyzed by flow cytometry and demonstrate the pivotal role of NK cells in controlling the capacity of splenic macrophages to phagocytose C. albicans. In summary, these data provide evidence that the NK cells are the main inducers of phagocytic activity of splenic macrophages and that they mediate the protection against C. albicans systemic infection. [source] Disseminated candidiasis secondary to fungal and bacterial peritonitis in a young dogJOURNAL OF VETERINARY EMERGENCY AND CRITICAL CARE, Issue 2 2009Catherine L. Rogers DVM, DACVECC Abstract Objective , To describe a severe case of bacterial sepsis and disseminated candidiasis in a previously healthy dog. Case Summary , Fungal sepsis was identified in a 2-year-old dog following intestinal dehiscence 4 days after abdominal surgery. Septic peritonitis was identified at admission and evidence of dehiscence at the previous enterotomy site was found during an exploratory laparotomy. Both gram-positive cocci and Candida albicans were cultured from the abdominal cavity. Candida sp. was also subsequently cultured from a central venous catheter. Euthanasia was performed due to failure to respond to therapy. Fungal organisms, morphologically consistent with Candida spp., were found in the lungs and kidney on postmortem histopathologic examination indicating disseminated candidiasis. New or Unique Information Provided , Candida peritonitis is a well-recognized entity in humans and contributes to morbidity and mortality in critically ill patients. Abdominal surgery, intestinal perforation, presence of central venous catheters, and administration of broad-spectrum antibiotics are all considered to be suspected risk factors. This report describes the first known case of systemic candidiasis occurring secondary to Candida peritonitis and bacterial sepsis in a critically ill dog. [source] Functional specialization and differential regulation of short-chain carboxylic acid transporters in the pathogen Candida albicansMOLECULAR MICROBIOLOGY, Issue 6 2010Neide Vieira Summary The major fungal pathogen Candida albicans has the metabolic flexibility to assimilate a wide range of nutrients in its human host. Previous studies have suggested that C. albicans can encounter glucose-poor microenvironments during infection and that the ability to use alternative non-fermentable carbon sources contributes to its virulence. JEN1 encodes a monocarboxylate transporter in C. albicans and we show that its paralogue, JEN2, encodes a novel dicarboxylate plasma membrane transporter, subjected to glucose repression. A strain deleted in both genes lost the ability to transport lactic, malic and succinic acids by a mediated mechanism and it displayed a growth defect on these substrates. Although no significant morphogenetic or virulence defects were found in the double mutant strain, both JEN1 and JEN2 were strongly induced during infection. Jen1-GFP (green fluorescent protein) and Jen2-GFP were upregulated following the phagocytosis of C. albicans cells by neutrophils and macrophages, displaying similar behaviour to an Icl1-GFP fusion. In the murine model of systemic candidiasis approximately 20,25% of C. albicans cells infecting the kidney expressed Jen1-GFP and Jen2-GFP. Our data suggest that Jen1 and Jen2 are expressed in glucose-poor niches within the host, and that these short-chain carboxylic acid transporters may be important in the early stages of infection. [source] Production of hybrid phage displaying secreted aspartyl proteinase epitope of Candida albicans and its application for the diagnosis of disseminated candidiasisMYCOSES, Issue 3 2007Qiong Yang Summary The secreted aspartyl proteinases (Saps) of Candida albicans have been implicated as immunodominant antigens and virulence factors associated with adherence and tissue invasion. A hybrid phage displaying the Sap epitope VKYTS was constructed by cloning the corresponding DNA fragments into the pfd88 vector. Similar to native Sap, the phage-displayed epitope showed reactivity to sera from mice and patients with systemic C. albicans infection but not from those with oropharyngeal candidiasis and healthy individuals on Western blot. Furthermore, a new enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay was developed to detect the anti-Sap antibody with hybrid phage displaying Sap epitope VKYTS that can be recognised by anti-Sap antibodies. Sequential sera were tested from patients and mice with systemic candidiasis and oropharyngeal candidiasis, and serum samples from healthy individuals were also included. The sensitivity and specificity were 77% and 88.3% for experimental mice, respectively. These values reached 60% and 85%, respectively, for human patients. These data indicate this phage-displayed epitope as an effective and less expensive reagent would be a valuable probe for the detection of specific Sap antibody in the sera of patients and mice with systemic C. albicans infection. [source] Absent reduction by HIV protease inhibitors of Candida albicans adhesion to endothelial cellsMYCOSES, Issue 3 2007Barbara Falkensammer Summary Highly active antiretroviral therapy including HIV protease inhibitors has led to a marked reduction of clinically relevant mucosal candidiasis. We have previously shown that HIV protease inhibitors directly inhibit adhesion of Candida albicans to epithelial cells at concentrations that are reached in vivo during antiretroviral therapy. The aim of this study was to establish whether HIV protease inhibitors also inhibit adhesion of Candida to endothelial cells, which play a major role in systemic fungal disease. Three C. albicans strains were incubated with human umbilical vein endothelial cells or an endothelial cell line in the presence of either Ritonavir, Saquinavir or Indinavir. Subsequently, adherence was determined by counting colony-forming units. The results were comparable and revealed that Ritonavir and Saquinavir significantly inhibited adherence to endothelial cells at only very high concentrations which are likely not reached in vivo, and Indinavir did not even inhibit then. Inhibition of adhesion of C. albicans to human cells by HIV protease inhibitors is not a general feature, but strongly cell type-dependent, and clearly not observed for endothelial cells in vitro, which are a main target of systemic candidiasis in vivo. [source] Role of cytokines of the tumour necrosis factor family in the immune response to disseminated Candida albicans infectionBRITISH JOURNAL OF SURGERY (NOW INCLUDES EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF SURGERY), Issue 7 2000M. G. Netea Background Tumour necrosis factor (TNF) ,, lymphotoxin (LT) ,, CD40L and FasL are members of the TNF family that play a crucial role in modulation of the immune response. Their role in the defence against infection with Candida albicans was investigated in mice deficient in either TNF-, and LT-, (TNF,/, LT,/, mice), CD40L (CD40L,/, mice) or Fas (MRL/lpr mice). Methods Mortality rates were compared in mice infected intravenously with 106 colony-forming units of C. albicans per mouse. Results After infection with C. albicans the TNF,/, LT,/, mice had a significantly increased mortality rate compared with control mice (100 versus 40 per cent; P < 0·01). This was due to a 10,1000-fold increased outgrowth of the yeasts in the kidneys and liver of TNF,/, LT,/, mice (P < 0·01). Defective recruitment and phagocytosis, but not Candida killing, were responsible for these effects. CD40L,/, mice were also more susceptible to systemic candidiasis than the wild-type controls (mortality rate 80 versus 50 per cent; P < 0·05), and the growth of Candida in the kidneys was one order of magnitude higher in the deficient than in control mice (P < 0·05). Neutrophil function in the CD40L,/, mice was normal, whereas decreased Candida killing by macrophages through nitric oxide-dependent mechanisms was responsible for the effect of CD40/CD40L interactions. In contrast, Fas-defective MRL/lpr mice were significantly more resistant to disseminated candidiasis (mortality rate 50 versus 100 per cent; P < 0·01); this was mediated by the facilitation of neutrophil migration to the site of infection. Conclusion Cytokines of the TNF family play a crucial role in the modulation of host defence against fatal C. albicans infection. Their effects are exerted selectively at the level of neutrophil or macrophage function. © 2000 British Journal of Surgery Society Ltd [source] Spontaneous intestinal perforation and Candida peritonitis presenting as extensive necrotizing enterocolitisACTA PAEDIATRICA, Issue 2 2003NJ Robertson Spontaneous intestinal perforation (SIP) has been increasingly reported in very-low-birthweight (VLBW) infants, although it is still less common than necrotizing enterocolitis (NEC). In around one-third of cases, SIP is associated with systemic candidiasis. We describe a case of SIP and Candida peritonitis in a VLBW infant, which was mistakenly diagnosed as NEC during the infant's short life. At laparotomy, the bowel surface was black and thought to be necrotic. As the infant was thought to have whole-bowel necrosis due to NEC, her condition was deemed incompatible with survival. At postmortem, however, the bowel wall was found to be healthy apart from a very localized patch of necrosis associated with a single perforation. The bowel was covered by a thick, black, serosal exudate consisting of fungal elements from Candida albicans. Conclusion: This case reinforces the fact that a markedly discoloured bowel is not necessarily necrotic and that the discoloration can potentially recover. [source] |