نتایج جستجو برای: c dubliniensis

تعداد نتایج: 1056745  

2012
Suhail Ahmad Ziauddin Khan Mohammad Asadzadeh Ajmal Theyyathel Rachel Chandy

BACKGROUND Candida albicans is the most pathogenic Candida species but shares many phenotypic features with Candida dubliniensis and may, therefore, be misidentified in clinical microbiology laboratories. Candidemia cases due to C. dubliniensis are increasingly being reported in recent years. Accurate identification is warranted since mortality rates are highest for C. albicans infections, howe...

2009
Virginia Marta Jewtuchowicz Maria Teresa Mujica Maria celina Malzone Alicia Cuesta Maria lorena Nastri Cristina Adela Iovannitti Alcira Cristina Rosa

BACKGROUND It is recognized that Candida dubliniensis commonly colonizes oral and subgingival sites in immunocompetent subjects with periodontal disease. OBJECTIVE Since there are few data available on genetic characterization of C. dubliniensis in periodontal pockets and other oral sites, the aim of this study was to characterize subgingival and mucosal C. dubliniensis isolates recovered fro...

Journal: :Journal of clinical microbiology 1998
I F Salkin W R Pruitt A A Padhye D Sullivan D Coleman D H Pincus

The conventional identification (assimilation profiles in the API 20C [bioMérieux Vitek, Inc., Hazelwood, Mo.] identification system, colony color on CHROMagar Candida [CHROMagar, Paris, France], and morphology on cornmealTween 80 agar) of 32 atypical isolates of Candida albicans recovered during a study of oropharyngeal candidiasis in human immunodeficiency virus-infected individuals could not...

Journal: :Journal of clinical microbiology 1999
M A Pfaller S A Messer S Gee S Joly C Pujol D J Sullivan D C Coleman D R Soll

Candida dubliniensis is a newly recognized fungal pathogen causing mucosal disease in AIDS patients. Although preliminary studies indicate that most strains of C. dubliniensis are susceptible to established antifungal agents, fluconazole-resistant strains have been detected. Furthermore, fluconazole-resistant strains are easily derived in vitro, and these strains exhibit increased expression of...

Journal: :Journal of clinical microbiology 2002
Marcos Martinez José L López-Ribot William R Kirkpatrick Brent J Coco Stefano P Bachmann Thomas F Patterson

Candida dubliniensis is an opportunistic yeast that has been increasingly implicated in oropharyngeal candidiasis (OPC) in human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-infected patients but may be underreported due to its similarity with Candida albicans. Although most C. dubliniensis isolates are susceptible to fluconazole, the inducibility of azole resistance in vitro has been reported. Thus, the use o...

Journal: :Eukaryotic cell 2015
Claude Pujol Karla J Daniels David R Soll

Candida albicans and Candida dubliniensis are highly related species that share the same main developmental programs. In C. albicans, it has been demonstrated that the biofilms formed by strains heterozygous and homozygous at the mating type locus (MTL) differ functionally, but studies rarely identify the MTL configuration. This becomes a particular problem in studies of C. dubliniensis, given ...

Journal: :Revista da Sociedade Brasileira de Medicina Tropical 2013
Carlos Eduardo Blanco Linares Sandro Rogério Giacomelli Delsi Altenhofen Sydney Hartz Alves Vera Maria Morsch Maria Rosa Chitolina Schetinger

INTRODUCTION Candida dubliniensis, a new species of Candida that has been recovered from several sites in healthy people, has been associated with recurrent episodes of oral candidiasis in AIDS and HIV-positive patients. This species is closely related to C. albicans. The enzymatic activity of C. dubliniensis in response to oxidative stress is of interest for the development of drugs to combat ...

Journal: :Revista do Instituto de Medicina Tropical de Sao Paulo 2005
Sydney Hartz Alves Jorge A Horta Eveline P Milán Liliane A Scheid Marilene H Vainstein Janio M Santurio Arnaldo L Colombo

The purpose of the present study was to evaluate the identification of 19 Brazilian C. dubliniensis based on the biochemical profile exhibited when tested by the commercial identification kit ID 32C (bioMerieux). Thirteen of the isolates were rigorously identified as C. dubliniensis and the remaining isolates (six) were considered as having a doubtful profile but the software also suggested tha...

Journal: :Archives of oral biology 2011
Anna Carolina Borges Pereira Costa Vanessa Maria de Campos Rasteiro Cristiane Aparecida Pereira Emily Setsuko Halter da Silva Hashimoto Milton Beltrame Juliana Campos Junqueira Antonio Olavo Cardoso Jorge

The effect of erythrosine- and LED-mediated photodynamic therapy (PDT) on planktonic cultures and biofilms of Candida albicans and Candida dubliniensis was evaluated. Planktonic cultures of standardized suspensions (10(6)cells/mL) of C. albicans and C. dubliniensis were treated with erythrosine concentrations of 0.39-200 μM and LEDs in a 96-well microtiter plate. Biofilms formed by C. albicans ...

2013
Katja Palige Jörg Linde Ronny Martin Bettina Böttcher Francesco Citiulo Derek J. Sullivan Johann Weber Claudia Staib Steffen Rupp Bernhard Hube Joachim Morschhäuser Peter Staib

Candida albicans and Candida dubliniensis are pathogenic fungi that are highly related but differ in virulence and in some phenotypic traits. During in vitro growth on certain nutrient-poor media, C. albicans and C. dubliniensis are the only yeast species which are able to produce chlamydospores, large thick-walled cells of unknown function. Interestingly, only C. dubliniensis forms pseudohypha...

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