نتایج جستجو برای: candida dubliniensis

تعداد نتایج: 30021  

Journal: :Revista iberoamericana de micologia 2003
Valerio Vidotto Barbara Mantoan Agostino Pugliese José Pontón Guillermo Quindós Shigeji Aoki Shoko Ito-Kuwa

Twenty-seven Candida albicans strains and 26 Candida dubliniensis strains, isolated from HIV patients, were tested for their adherence to buccal and vaginal epithelial cells. Both species showed important levels of adhesion to buccal and vaginal epithelial cells, although C. albicans showed the highest levels of adhesion. These results suggest that both Candida species are well adapted, in term...

Journal: :Journal of clinical microbiology 2001
M A Jabra-Rizk T M Brenner M Romagnoli A A Baqui W G Merz W A Falkler T F Meiller

CHROMagar Candida is a differential culture medium for the isolation and presumptive identification of clinically important yeasts. Recently the medium was reformulated by Becton Dickinson. This study was designed to evaluate the performance of the new formula of CHROMagar against the original CHROMagar Candida for recovery, growth, and colony color with stock cultures and with direct plating o...

Journal: :Journal of clinical microbiology 1998
C M Elie T J Lott E Reiss C J Morrison

Rapid identification of Candida species has become more important because of an increase in infections caused by species other than Candida albicans, including species innately resistant to azole antifungal drugs. We previously developed a PCR assay with an enzyme immunoassay (EIA) format to detect amplicons from the five most common Candida species by using universal fungal primers and species...

2012
Jing Zhang Joseph Heitman Ying-Lien Chen

Candida dubliniensis, an emerging fungal pathogen, is the closest known species to the established pathogenic species Candida albicans. Despite the fact that these two species share > 80% genome sequence identity, they exhibit distinct properties such as less hyphal growth, reduced pathogenicity and increased sensitivity to sodium stress and elevated temperatures in C. dubliniensis compared wit...

Journal: :Emerging Infectious Diseases 2002

Journal: :Molecular microbiology 2007
Gary P Moran Donna M MacCallum Martin J Spiering David C Coleman Derek J Sullivan

Candida dubliniensis is genetically closely related to Candida albicans, but causes fewer infections in humans and exhibits reduced virulence and filamentation in animal models of infection. We investigated the role of the C. dubliniensis transcriptional repressor-encoding gene CdNRG1 in regulating this phenotype. Deletion of both copies of CdNRG1 increased the formation of true hyphae by C. du...

2012
Gary P. Moran David C. Coleman Derek J. Sullivan

Candida albicans and Candida dubliniensis are highly related pathogenic yeast species. However, C. albicans is far more prevalent in human infection and has been shown to be more pathogenic in a wide range of infection models. Comparison of the genomes of the two species has revealed that they are very similar although there are some significant differences, largely due to the expansion of viru...

Journal: :Virulence 2011
Derek J Sullivan Gary P Moran

Candida albicans and Candida dubliniensis are two very closely related species of pathogenic yeast. C. albicans is the most prevalent species in the human gastrointestinal tract and is responsible for far more opportunistic infections in comparison with C. dubliniensis. This disparity is likely to be due to the reduced ability of C. dubliniensis to undergo the yeast to hypha transition, a chang...

Journal: :Pediatric dentistry 2000
D M Brown M A Jabra-Rizk W A Falkler A A Baqui T F Meiller

PURPOSE The combination of an immature immune system and suppressed cellular immunity in children with HIV infections provides optimal conditions for rapid disease progression. As a result, pediatric AIDS has become a major epidemiological challenge. Oral fungal colonization remains one of the most common opportunistic infections observed in both adult and pediatric HIV infected patients. Altho...

2007
Miles A. Nunn Stefanie M. Schäfer Michael A. Petrou Jillian R.M. Brown

We isolated Candida dubliniensis from a nonhuman source, namely, tick samples from an Irish seabird colony. The species was unambiguously identifi ed by phenotypic and genotypic means. Analysis of the 5.8S rRNA gene showed that the environmental isolates belong to C. dubliniensis genotype 1.

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