, and are the four most common human fungal pathogens isolated that can cause superficial and invasive infections. It has been shown that specific metabolites present in the secretomes of these fungal pathogens are important for their virulence. is the second most common isolate world-wide and has an innate resistance to azoles, xenobiotics and oxidative stress that allows this fungal pathogen to evade the immune response and persist within the host. Here, we analyzed and compared the secretome with those of and the non-pathogenic yeast . In , we identified a different number of metabolites depending on the growth media: 12 in synthetic complete media (SC), 27 in SC-glutamic acid and 23 in rich media (YPD). specific metabolites are 1-dodecene (0.09 ± 0.11%), 2,5-dimethylundecane (1.01 ± 0.19%), 3,7-dimethyldecane (0.14 ± 0.15%), and octadecane (0.4 ± 0.53%). The metabolites that are shared with , and are phenylethanol, which is synthesized from phenylalanine, and eicosane and nonanoic acid (identified as trimethylsilyl ester), which are synthesized from fatty acid metabolism. Phenylethanol is the most abundant metabolite in all fungi tested: 26.36 ± 17.42% (), 46.77 ± 15.58% (), 49.76 ± 18.43% (), 5.72 ± 0.66% (.) and 44.58 ± 27.91% (). The analysis of secretome will allow us to further our understanding of the possible role these metabolites could play in its virulence.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8270331 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/molecules26133881 | DOI Listing |
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