AI Article Synopsis

  • Dermatophytes are common causes of skin fungal infections worldwide, but resistance to antifungal drugs poses treatment challenges, prompting a study in Iraq to understand their distribution and genetic resistance factors.
  • The research identified 102 dermatophyte isolates, with Tinea corporis being the most prevalent clinical case; T. indotineae was the most common species, followed by T. mentagrophytes and M. canis.
  • Mutation analysis revealed specific changes in the squalene epoxidase gene associated with terbinafine resistance, showing T. indotineae and T. mentagrophytes had higher resistance compared to M. canis, which was more susceptible to antifungals.

Article Abstract

Dermatophytes show a wide geographic distribution and are the main causative agents of skin fungal infections in many regions of the world. Recently, their resistance to antifungal drugs has led to an obstacle to effective treatment. To address the lack of dermatophytosis data in Iraq, this study was designed to investigate the distribution and prevalence of dermatophytes in the human population and single point mutations in squalene epoxidase gene (SQLE) of terbinafine resistant isolates. The identification of 102 dermatophytes isolated from clinical human dermatophytosis was performed through morphological and microscopic characteristics followed by molecular analysis based on ITS and TEF-1α sequencing. Phylogeny was achieved through RAxML analysis. CLSI M38-A2 protocol was used to assess antifungal susceptibility of the isolates to four major antifungal drugs. Additionally, the presence of point mutations in SQLE gene, which are responsible for terbinafine resistance was investigated. Tinea corporis was the most prevalent clinical manifestation accounting for 37.24% of examined cases of dermatophytosis. Based on ITS, T. indotineae (50.98%), T. mentagrophytes (19.61%), and M. canis (29.41%) was identified as an etiologic species. T. indotineae and T. mentagrophytes strains were identified as T. interdigitale based on TEF-1α. Terbinafine showed the highest efficacy among the tested antifungal drugs. T. indotineae and T. mentagrophytes showed the highest resistance to antifungal drugs with MICs of 2-4 and 4 μg/mL, while M. canis was the most susceptible species. Three of T. indotineae isolates showed mutations in SQLE gene PheLeu substitution. A non-previously described point mutation, PheLeu was identified in T. indotineae and mutations LysAsn, PheLeu and LeuPhe were diagnosed in T. mentagrophytes XVII. The results of mutation analysis showed that PheLeu was a destabilizing mutation; protein stability has decreased with variations in pH, and point mutations affected the interatomic interaction, resulting in bond disruption. These results could help to control the progression of disease effectively and make decisions regarding the selection of appropriate drugs for dermatophyte infections.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11148054PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-024-63425-wDOI Listing

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