The challenges of the genome-based identification of antifungal resistance in the clinical routine.

Front Microbiol

Core Scientific and Technical Units, Instituto de Salud Carlos III, Madrid, Spain.

Published: April 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • The rise of antifungal-resistant infections poses a serious healthcare threat, emphasizing the need for better understanding and identification of genetic factors contributing to resistance.
  • Low-cost DNA sequencing can help identify the "resistome," but current efforts to map resistance in fungi are lacking compared to bacteria.
  • Developing comprehensive databases, utilizing laboratory screenings for genetic changes, and employing advanced sequencing methods are crucial steps for improving antifungal therapies and addressing resistance effectively.

Article Abstract

The increasing number of chronic and life-threatening infections caused by antimicrobial resistant fungal isolates is of critical concern. Low DNA sequencing cost may facilitate the identification of the genomic profile leading to resistance, the resistome, to rationally optimize the design of antifungal therapies. However, compared to bacteria, initiatives for resistome detection in eukaryotic pathogens are underdeveloped. Firstly, reported mutations in antifungal targets leading to reduced susceptibility must be extensively collected from the literature to generate comprehensive databases. This information should be complemented with specific laboratory screenings to detect the highest number possible of relevant genetic changes in primary targets and associations between resistance and other genomic markers. Strikingly, some drug resistant strains experience high-level genetic changes such as ploidy variation as much as duplications and reorganizations of specific chromosomes. Such variations involve allelic dominance, gene dosage increments and target expression regime effects that should be explicitly parameterized in antifungal resistome prediction algorithms. Clinical data indicate that predictors need to consider the precise pathogen species and drug levels of detail, instead of just genus and drug class. The concomitant needs for mutation accuracy and assembly quality assurance suggest hybrid sequencing approaches involving third-generation methods will be utilized. Moreover, fatal fast infections, like fungemia and meningitis, will further require both sequencing and analysis facilities are available in-house. Altogether, the complex nature of antifungal resistance demands extensive sequencing, data acquisition and processing, bioinformatic analysis pipelines, and standard protocols to be accomplished prior to genome-based protocols are applied in the clinical setting.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10157239PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2023.1134755DOI Listing

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