AI Article Synopsis

  • * Samples from abandoned wood in an area with a history of sporotrichosis cases revealed a fungal colony that was genetically similar to a strain found in a cat with skin lesions.
  • * The study showed that the sporotrichosis-causing fungi can persist in the environment for years, highlighting gaps in understanding its ecological dynamics, despite its prevalence in Brazil.

Article Abstract

Sporotrichosis has been expanding throughout the Brazilian territory in recent years. New outbreaks have emerged, and consequently, the sporotrichosis agents, mainly , should remain in the environment somehow. Therefore, the aim of this study was to investigate the presence of spp. in the environment from an area of ​​the Rio de Janeiro state, Brazil, with recurrent cases of human and animal sporotrichosis. Abandoned demolition timber wood samples were collected in the garden of a house where the cases of human and feline sporotrichosis have occurred in the last 10 years. The environmental survey revealed a spp. colony from the serial dilution cultures of one abandoned demolition wood sample. In addition, a fungal strain isolated from a cat with skin lesions that lived in the house was also included in the study. The species-specific PCR, and calmodulin partial sequencing identified the environmental and cat isolates as . Furthermore, the phylogenetic analysis performed with the partial sequences of internal transcribed spacer region and constitutive genes (calmodulin, β-tubulin, and chitin synthase) showed high similarity between environmental and cat isolates from the same geographic region. Moreover, the antifungal susceptibility test revealed that the minimal inhibitory concentration of itraconazole from the environment isolate was lower than the cat isolate, while amphotericin B and terbinafine were similar. Our results show that is able to maintain itself in the environmental material for years. With this, we corroborate that the eco-epidemiology of sporotrichosis is not well understood, and despite the major occurrence of . in Brazil, it is rarely isolated from the environment.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9134204PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fcimb.2022.894297DOI Listing

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