نتایج جستجو برای: c dubliniensis

تعداد نتایج: 1056745  

2012
Yi Ping Ge Le Wang Gui Xia Lu Yong Nian Shen Wei Da Liu

Candida dubliniensis is an emerging pathogen capable of causing superficial as well as systemic infections. Due to its close similarity to C. albcians, conventional methods based on phenotypic traits are not always reliable in identification of C. dubliniensis. In this study, we developed a PCR-restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) assay to identify and discriminate between the two cl...

Journal: :Clinical and diagnostic laboratory immunology 2001
M A Jabra-Rizk W A Falkler W G Merz T F Meiller

Hydrophobic interactions, based on cell surface hydrophobicity (CSH), are among the many and varied mechanisms of adherence deployed by the pathogenic yeast Candida albicans. Recently it was shown that, unlike C. albicans, C. dubliniensis is a species that exhibits an outer fibrillar layer consistent with constant CSH. Previously, C. dubliniensis grown at 25 or 37 degrees C was shown to coaggre...

2005
O. M. Momani A. Qaddoomi

1Department of Microbiology, Omar Medical Laboratories, Amman, Jordan (Correspondence to O.M. Momani: [email protected]). King Hussein Medical Centre, Amman, Jordan. Received: 09/10/02; accepted: 14/09/03 ABSTRACT Candida dubliniensis is an emerging yeast pathogen isolated mainly from immunocompromised patients. As molecular tests are currently unsuitable for use in routine diagnostic labo...

Journal: :Journal of clinical microbiology 2006
Agnes Marot-Leblond Bertrand Beucher Sandrine David Sandrine Nail-Billaud Raymond Robert

Cell components of the dimorphic pathogenic fungus Candida dubliniensis were used to prepare monoclonal antibodies (MAbs). One MAb, designated 12F7-F2, was shown by indirect immunofluorescence to be specific for a surface antigen of Candida dubliniensis yeast cells. No reactivity was observed with other fungal genera or with other Candida species, including Candida albicans, that share many phe...

Journal: :Journal of clinical microbiology 1998
F C Odds L Van Nuffel G Dams

To establish the historical prevalence of the novel yeast species Candida dubliniensis, a survey of 2,589 yeasts originally identified as Candida albicans and maintained in a stock collection dating back to the early 1970s was undertaken. A total of 590 yeasts, including 93 (18.5%) beta-glucosidase-negative isolates among 502 isolates that showed abnormal colony colors on a differential chromog...

2013
Thomas P Moloney Joseph Park

BACKGROUND Recent studies have shown that the recently identified organism Candida dubliniensis is less pathogenic than the more common Candida albicans. Due to its rare nature, C. dubliniensis has been previously reported as the causative organism in endophthalmitis in only three cases. We undertook a multicenter, retrospective, consecutive case series to describe the clinical features and out...

Journal: :Journal of clinical microbiology 2000
H Peltroche-Llacsahuanga S Schmidt M Seibold R Lütticken G Haase

Candida dubliniensis is often found in mixed culture with C. albicans, but its recognition is hampered as the color of its colonies in primary culture on CHROMagar Candida varies. Furthermore, definite identification of C. dubliniensis is difficult to achieve, time-consuming, and expensive. Therefore, a method to discriminate between these two closely related yeast species by fatty acid methyl ...

Journal: :Revista iberoamericana de micologia 2001
M A Jabra-Rizk W A Falkler W G Merz A A Baqui J I Kelley T F Meiller

Microbial adherence to mucosal surfaces is an important first step in the initiation of the pathogenic process in the oral cavity. Candida albicans, the most adherent and pathogenic Candida species, utilizes a variety of mechanisms to adhere to human tissues. Although the strongest mechanism of adherence involves mannoprotein adhesins on C. albicans, cell surface hydrophobicity (CSH) plays an i...

Journal: :Journal of clinical microbiology 1999
O Kurzai W J Heinz D J Sullivan D C Coleman M Frosch F A Mühlschlegel

The development of a satisfactory means to reliably distinguish between the two closely related species Candida albicans and Candida dubliniensis in the clinical mycology laboratory has proved difficult because these two species are phenotypically so similar. In this study, we have detected homologues of the pH-regulated C. albicans PHR1 and PHR2 genes in C. dubliniensis. Restriction fragment l...

Journal: :Journal of clinical microbiology 2008
Brenda A McManus David C Coleman Gary Moran Emmanuelle Pinjon Dorothée Diogo Marie-Elisabeth Bougnoux Silvia Borecká-Melkusova Helena Bujdákova Philip Murphy Christophe d'Enfert Derek J Sullivan

The pathogenic yeast Candida dubliniensis is phylogenetically very closely related to Candida albicans, and both species share many phenotypic and genetic characteristics. DNA fingerprinting using the species-specific probe Cd25 and sequence analysis of the internal transcribed spacer (ITS) region of the ribosomal gene cluster previously showed that C. dubliniensis is comprised of three major c...

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