Publications by authors named "Charles Giamberardino"

Cryptococcal meningitis (CM) causes significant global morbidity and mortality. Current therapeutic strategies rely on deoxycholated or liposomal forms of the polyene amphotericin B. Nystatin is also a polyene with broad-spectrum antimicrobial activity.

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Trehalose-6-phosphate synthase (TPS1) was identified as a virulence factor for and a promising therapeutic target. This study reveals previously unknown roles of TPS1 in evasion of host defenses during pulmonary and disseminated phases of infection. In the pulmonary infection model, TPS1-deleted () are rapidly cleared by mouse lungs whereas TPS1-sufficent WT (H99) and revertant (:) strains expand in the lungs and disseminate, causing 100% mortality.

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Cryptococcal meningitis (CM) is a fungal disease caused by the invasion of Cryptococcus yeast cells into the central nervous system. The organism is thought to enter the body through the lungs and then escape due to dysregulation of the immune response. Multiple animal species have been used to model the infection and characterize CM including mice, rats, dogs, guinea pigs, and rabbits.

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Invasive fungal infections are a significant public health concern, with mortality rates ranging from 20% to 85% despite current treatments. Therefore, we examined whether a ketogenic diet could serve as a successful treatment intervention in murine models of and infection in combination with fluconazole-a low-cost, readily available antifungal therapy. The ketogenic diet is a high-fat, low-carbohydrate diet that promotes fatty acid oxidation as an alternative to glycolysis through the production of ketone bodies.

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Antifungal drug resistance is an emerging cause of treatment failure in invasive fungal infections, and antifungal susceptibility testing (AFST) may inform treatment decisions. Currently, there are no established AFST guidelines for Talaromyces marneffei (Tm) or other dimorphic fungi. We developed a colorimetric AFST method using a fluorescent redox indicator alamarBlue, which changes from blue to pink in proportion to cellular metabolic activity.

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Cryptococcal meningoencephalitis (CM) is a devastating fungal disease with high morbidity and mortality. The current regimen that is standard-of-care involves a combination of three different drugs administered for up to one year. There is a critical need for new therapies due to both toxicity and inadequate fungicidal activity of the currently available antifungal drugs.

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Patients receiving the Bruton's tyrosine kinase (BTK) inhibitor ibrutinib have an increased likelihood of fungal infections. The objectives of this study were to determine if Cryptococcus neoformans infection severity was isolate dependent with BTK inhibition and whether blocking BTK impacted infection severity in a mouse model. We compared four clinical isolates from patients on ibrutinib to virulent (H99) and avirulent (A1-35-8) reference strains.

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Introduction: Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) has been implicated in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) due to its ability to spread inflammatory proteins throughout the nervous system. We hypothesized that filtration of the CSF could remove pathogenic proteins and prevent them from altering motor phenotypes in a mouse model.

Methods: We filtered the CSF from 11 ALS patients via 100 kilodaltons (kD) molecular weight cut-off filters.

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Article Synopsis
  • Cryptococcus neoformans causes cryptococcosis, which leads to around 180,000 deaths annually, particularly affecting patients with HIV, highlighting a need to understand the link between genetic diversity of the fungus and clinical outcomes.
  • A genome-wide association study (GWAS) of 284 C. neoformans isolates from Malawi reveals variants associated with fungal growth rates and burdens, with significant variations in genes related to metabolism and growth.
  • The findings demonstrate that glycolysis is crucial for the fungus's survival in the central nervous system and may influence patient mortality, suggesting that understanding these genetic factors can improve treatment outcomes for cryptococcosis.
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Cryptococcal Meningitis (CM) is uniformly fatal if not treated, and treatment options are limited. We previously reported on the activity of APX2096, the prodrug of the novel Gwt1 inhibitor APX2039, in a mouse model of CM. Here, we investigated the efficacy of APX2039 in mouse and rabbit models of CM.

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Article Synopsis
  • Cryptococcus neoformans is a dangerous fungal pathogen that can significantly affect the human central nervous system, leading to high rates of illness and death, especially in patients with cryptococcal meningoencephalitis.
  • This research involved analyzing yeast transcriptomes from patient cerebrospinal fluid samples to understand the genetic behaviors of C. neoformans and Cryptococcus gattii in various environments.
  • Key findings included the identification of genes important for survival and virulence, with particular emphasis on carbon metabolism and stress responses, leading to the discovery of a glycoprotein gene that impacts the virulence of these fungi in animal models.
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The environmental yeast Cryptococcus neoformans is the most common cause of deadly fungal meningitis in primarily immunocompromised populations. A number of factors contribute to cryptococcal pathogenesis. Among them, inositol utilization has been shown to promote C.

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Background: Leptomeningeal metastases (LM), late-stage cancer when malignant cells migrate to the subarachnoid space (SAS), have an extremely poor prognosis. Current treatment regimens fall short in effectively reducing SAS tumor burden. Neurapheresis therapy is a novel approach employing filtration and enhanced circulation of the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF).

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Article Synopsis
  • * When comparing ST5 and non-ST5 strains, both showed similar lab characteristics but ST5 had more variability in size and induced stronger initial inflammation responses in host models despite lower overall virulence.
  • * The observed differences in ST5 may give it an advantage in adapting to new environments, particularly in immunocompetent individuals, suggesting an evolutionary aspect to its pathogenicity.
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is an opportunistic fungal pathogen that at its peak epidemic levels caused an estimated million cases of cryptococcal meningitis per year worldwide. This species can grow in diverse environmental (trees, soil and bird excreta) and host niches (intracellular microenvironments of phagocytes and free-living in host tissues). The genetic basic for adaptation to these different conditions is not well characterized, as most experimental work has relied on a single reference strain of .

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Cryptococcal meningitis is a lethal disease with few therapeutic options. Induction therapy with fluconazole has been consistently demonstrated to be associated with suboptimal microbiological and clinical outcomes. Exposure to fluconazole causes dynamic changes in antifungal susceptibility, which are associated with the development of aneuploidy.

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spp., important fungal pathogens, are the leading cause of fungus-related mortality in human immunodeficiency virus-infected patients, and new therapeutic options are desperately needed. Isavuconazonium sulfate, a newer triazole antifungal agent, was studied to characterize the exposure-response relationship in a rabbit model of cryptococcal meningoencephalitis.

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Cryptococcal meningitis (CM) has emerged as the most common life-threatening fungal meningitis worldwide. Current management involves a sequential, longitudinal regimen of antifungals; despite a significant improvement in survival compared with uniform mortality without treatment, this drug paradigm has not led to a consistent cure. Neurapheresis therapy, extracorporeal filtration of yeasts from cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) in infected hosts, is presented here as a novel, one-time therapy for CM.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study aimed to better understand fungal meningitis by analyzing a diverse group of patients over a long period, using a large healthcare database.
  • It focused on four types of fungal meningitis, finding that cryptococcal meningitis was the most common and led to the highest healthcare costs and hospital stays.
  • The research highlights the significant economic burden and long-term healthcare resources needed for patients with fungal meningitis in the U.S.
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is an opportunistic fungal pathogen that causes approximately 625,000 deaths per year from nervous system infections. Here, we leveraged a unique, genetically diverse population of from sub-Saharan Africa, commonly isolated from mopane trees, to determine how selective pressures in the environment coincidentally adapted for human virulence. Genome sequencing and phylogenetic analysis of 387 isolates, representing the global VNI and African VNB lineages, highlighted a deep, nonrecombining split in VNB (herein, VNBI and VNBII).

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The pathogenic species of are a major cause of mortality owing to severe infections in immunocompromised as well as immunocompetent individuals. Although antifungal treatment is usually effective, many patients relapse after treatment, and in such cases, comparative analyses of the genomes of incident and relapse isolates may reveal evidence of determinative, microevolutionary changes within the host. Here, we analyzed serial isolates cultured from cerebrospinal fluid specimens of 18 South African patients with recurrent cryptococcal meningitis.

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Thymectomy in neonatal rodents is an established and reliable procedure for immunological studies. However, in adult rats, complications of hemorrhage and pneumothorax from pleural disruption can result in a significant mortality rate. This protocol is a simple method of rat thymectomy that utilizes a mini-sternotomy and endotracheal intubation.

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Graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) is a severe and frequent complication of allogeneic bone marrow transplantation (BMT) that involves the gastrointestinal (GI) tract and lungs. The pathobiology of GVHD is complex and involves immune cell recognition of host Ags as foreign. We hypothesize a central role for the collectin surfactant protein A (SP-A) in regulating the development of GVHD after allogeneic BMT.

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TCR signaling plays a critical role in regulatory T cell (Treg) development. However, the mechanism for tissue-specific induction of Tregs in the periphery remains unclear. We observed that surfactant protein A (SP-A)-deficient mice have impaired expression of Foxp3 and fewer CD25(+)Foxp3(+) Tregs after ex vivo stimulation and after stimulation with LPS in vivo.

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Background: Caveolin-1, the hallmark protein of caveolae, is highly expressed within the lung in the epithelium, endothelium, and in immune cells. In addition to its classical roles in cholesterol metabolism and endocytosis, caveolin-1 has also been shown to be important in inflammatory signaling pathways. In particular, caveolin-1 is known to associate with the nitric oxide synthase enzymes, downregulating their activity.

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