[Conventional and molecular diagnostics in onychomycosis-part 2 : Molecular identification of causative dermatophytes by polymerase chain reaction and sequence analysis of the internal transcribed spacer region of ribosomal DNA].

Dermatologie (Heidelb)

Haut- und Laborarzt/Allergologie, Andrologie, Tätigkeitsschwerpunkt: Tropen- und Reisedermatologie (DDA), labopart - Medizinische Laboratorien, Labor Leipzig-Mölbis, Mölbiser Hauptstr. 8, 04571, Rötha/OT Mölbis, Deutschland.

Published: March 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • Traditional methods for identifying dermatophytes, like culture and fluorescence microscopy, are now being enhanced by molecular techniques, specifically uniplex-PCR-EIA for nail samples.
  • A study with 108 patients revealed that conventional identification methods combined with molecular analysis yielded reliable results, efficiently detecting common pathogens Trichophyton rubrum and Trichophyton interdigitale.
  • The use of PCR demonstrated high specificity and sensitivity, even identifying dermatophytes in samples that didn’t show cultural growth, making it a valuable tool for accurate diagnosis.

Article Abstract

Dermatophyte identification using traditional methods such as optics-based direct fluorescence microscopy and culture is nowadays supplemented by molecular biological methods. The validity of dermatophyte DNA detection with direct uniplex-polymerase chain reaction-enzyme immunoassay (PCR-EIA) in nail samples was proven by sequence analysis of the ribosomal internal transcribed spacer (ITS) region. A total of 108 dermatophytes, isolated from patients with onychomycosis, were positive for Trichophyton rubrum (TR) and Trichophyton interdigitale (TI) in culture and/or uniplex-PCR-EIA. Conventional methods for dermatophyte identification were complemented by direct uniplex-PCR-EIA and sequence analysis of the ribosomal ITS region (18S rRNA, ITS1, 5.8S rRNA, ITS2, 28S rRNA). Of 108 patients (average age 62, median age 73), 56 showed cultural growth with 31 of them being identified as TR and 23 as TI. There was high agreement with the sequence analysis. Surprisingly, the pathogen of a single nail sample was identified as T. quinckeanum (formerly T. mentagrophytes sensu stricto), a rare zoophilic dermatophyte in Germany. A single TI strain turned out to be a misidentified T. tonsurans based on the sequence analysis. In all, 34 of the 52 specimens lacking cultural growth were detected by PCR as TR, and 18 specimens could be identified as TI. The results of dermatophyte identification of culture-negative nail samples were also in agreement with the results of sequence analysis. Molecular biological methods are well applicable, and they show high reliability for direct dermatophyte identification in nail samples without prior cultivation. Especially for nail samples without cultural growth, PCR-based dermatophyte identification was highly specific and sensitive.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00105-023-05265-9DOI Listing

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