Unlabelled: Prolonged cultivation of certain filamentous fungi, including , on drug-free medium leads to degeneration and morphological heterogeneity, marked by the emergence of fluffy mycelium-type sectors. This phenomenon may indicate alterations in antifungal susceptibility profiles (particularly to amphotericin B (AmB) in ), as well as reductions or losses in conidiation, sexuality, secondary metabolite production, and/or virulence. In the present study, various characteristics of an AmB-resistant wild-type (WT) strain and its AmB-susceptible sectorized derivative (ATSec) were characterized. Compared to WT, ATSec exhibited increased susceptibility to AmB, reduced sporulation, and comparable sterol contents and virulence in . To elucidate the genes involved in AmB resistance, gene expression levels were compared between WT and ATSec with and without AmB treatment. The expression of P-type ATPase-related genes, which are implicated in membrane composition changes and consequently in AmB resistance, was significantly higher in the WT strain compared to ATSec. Moreover, the up-regulation of genes involved in the biosynthesis of polyketides-a diverse group of secondary metabolites-was higher in WT compared to ATSec, with a significant number of these genes also carrying at least one mutation. The findings of this study indicate that P-type ATPases may significantly be involved in AmB susceptibility and resistance observed in ATSec and WT strains. Additionally, mutations in polyketide synthase genes in ATSec may contribute to the phenotypic alterations associated with the sectorized phenotype.

Importance: Prolonged cultivation of certain filamentous fungi, including Aspergillus terreus, on drug-free medium leads to degeneration and morphological heterogeneity, marked by the emergence of fluffy mycelium-type sectors. This phenomenon may indicate alterations in antifungal susceptibility profiles (particularly to amphotericin B (AmB) in A. terreus), as well as reductions or losses in conidiation, sexuality, secondary metabolite production, and/or virulence. In the present study, various characteristics of an AmB-resistant wild-type strain (WT) and its AmB-susceptible sectorized derivative (ATSec) were characterized. Compared to WT, ATSec exhibited increased susceptibility to AmB, reduced sporulation, and comparable sterol contents and virulence in Galleria mellonella. To elucidate the genes involved in AmB resistance, gene expression levels were compared between WT and ATSec with and without AmB treatment. The expression of P-type ATPase-related genes, which are implicated in membrane composition changes and consequently in AmB resistance, was significantly higher in the WT strain compared to ATSec. Moreover, the up-regulation of genes involved in the biosynthesis of polyketides - a diverse group of secondary metabolites - was higher in WT compared to ATSec, with a significant number of these genes also carrying at least one mutation. The findings of this study indicate that P-type ATPases may significantly be involved in AmB susceptibility and resistance observed in ATSec and WT strains. Additionally, mutations in polyketide synthase genes in ATSec may contribute to the phenotypic alterations associated with the sectorized phenotype.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/mbio.03926-24DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

compared atsec
32
genes involved
16
involved amb
16
amb resistance
16
atsec
14
amb
12
genes
10
prolonged cultivation
8
cultivation filamentous
8
filamentous fungi
8

Similar Publications

Unlabelled: Prolonged cultivation of certain filamentous fungi, including , on drug-free medium leads to degeneration and morphological heterogeneity, marked by the emergence of fluffy mycelium-type sectors. This phenomenon may indicate alterations in antifungal susceptibility profiles (particularly to amphotericin B (AmB) in ), as well as reductions or losses in conidiation, sexuality, secondary metabolite production, and/or virulence. In the present study, various characteristics of an AmB-resistant wild-type (WT) strain and its AmB-susceptible sectorized derivative (ATSec) were characterized.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Morphological heterogeneity of cultures was observed during continued cultivation of amphotericin B (AMB)-resistant isolates on drug-free medium. Outgrowth leads to the emergence of multiple sectors that might result from increased growth rates at drug-free conditions. We evaluated the differences in AMB susceptibility and virulence between sector subcultures (ATSec), AMB-resistant (ATR) strains, and AMB-susceptible (ATS) strains.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!