AI Article Synopsis

  • Biofilms of Candida albicans show significant resistance to antimicrobial agents due to their heterogeneous nature, which allows for the development of resistant subpopulations.
  • The study identified a resistant subpopulation of blastospores left on the surface after most of the biofilm was removed, which demonstrated resistance to doses of amphotericin B that killed planktonic cells.
  • Differences in gene expression related to ergosterol and beta-1,6-glucan pathways suggest that enhanced resistance in this subpopulation may stem from changes in the cell membrane and wall, indicating a potential synergistic effect.

Article Abstract

The resistance of Candida albicans biofilms to a broad spectrum of antimicrobial agents has been well documented. Biofilms are known to be heterogeneous, consisting of microenvironments that may induce formation of resistant subpopulations. In this study we characterized one such subpopulation. C. albicans biofilms were cultured in a tubular flow cell (TF) for 36 h. The relatively large shear forces imposed by draining the TF removed most of the biofilm, which consisted of a tangled mass of filamentous forms with associated clusters of yeast forms. This portion of the biofilm exhibited the classic architecture and morphological heterogeneity of a C. albicans biofilm and was only slightly more resistant than either exponential- or stationary-phase planktonic cells. A submonolayer fraction of blastospores that remained on the substratum was resistant to 10 times the amphotericin B dose that eliminated the activity of the planktonic populations. A comparison between planktonic and biofilm populations of transcript abundance for genes coding for enzymes in the ergosterol (ERG1, -3, -5, -6, -9, -11, and -25) and beta-1,6-glucan (SKN and KRE1, -5, -6, and -9) pathways was performed by quantitative RT-PCR. The results indicate a possible association between the high level of resistance exhibited by the blastospore subpopulation and differential regulation of ERG1, ERG25, SKN1, and KRE1. We hypothesize that the resistance originates from a synergistic effect involving changes in both the cell membrane and the cell wall.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1635220PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/AAC.00997-06DOI Listing

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