AI Article Synopsis

  • - There is a unique fungal infection called chromoblastomycosis that can spread to the nervous system from chronic skin cases in healthy individuals, linked to a family of fungi known for their ability to break down certain chemicals.
  • - Researchers conducted genomic analysis on a specific strain of this fungus, resulting in insights about its 34.8 Mb genome, which contains 12,217 genes related to its survival and pathogenic abilities.
  • - The study confirmed that the fungus can infect animal models and highlighted its opportunistic nature, showing it has both ecological adaptations for thriving in harsh conditions and the ability to infect humans.

Article Abstract

Among agents of chromoblastomycosis, presents a unique type of infection because of its secondary neurotropic dissemination from a chronic cutaneous case in an immunocompetent patient. Neurotropism occurs with remarkable frequency in the fungal family Herpotrichiellaceae, possibly associated with the ability of some species to metabolize aromatic hydrocarbons. In an attempt to understand this new disease pattern, were conducted genomic analysis of (CBS 139214) performed with assembly, gene prediction, annotation and mitochondrial genome assembly, supplemented with animal infection models performed with in lineages BALB/c and C57BL/6. The genome draft of 34.8 Mb was assembled with a total of 12,217 protein-coding genes. Several proteins, enzymes and metabolic pathways related to extremotolerance and virulence were recognized. The enzyme profiles of black fungi involved in chromoblastomycosis and brain infection were analyzed with the Carbohydrate-Active Enzymes (CAZY) and peptidases database (MEROPS). The capacity of the fungus to survive inside animal model was confirmed by histopathological analysis and by presence of melanin and hyphae in host tissue. Although was isolated from brain in a murine model following intraperitoneal infection, cytokine levels were not statistically significant, indicating a profile of an opportunistic agent. A dual ecological ability can be concluded from presence of metabolic pathways for nutrient scavenging and extremotolerance, combined with a capacity to infect human hosts.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7417343PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fgene.2020.00822DOI Listing

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