Six acapsular strains of Cryptococcus neoformans obtained by chemical mutagenesis failed to produce a capsule in vivo and were avirulent in mice following high dose intramuscular, intraperitoneal or intravenous inoculation. Peritoneal granulomas were observed in all animals inoculated with the acapsular mutants. These granulomas were characterized by a large central mass consisting of intact, degenerating and necrotic yeast cells. This was surrounded by concentric layers of a broad band of histiocytes, a narrow band of fibroblasts, and around the periphery, a mass of lymphocytes and plasma cells. These isolates did not revert to an encapsulated or virulent state after more than a year of subculturing or 18 passages through mice.
R41,400 is a recently synthesized, water-soluble imidazole. Its antifungal properties were compared in vitro with those of miconazole using an agar dilution procedure and 175 isolates of human fungal pathogens. The filamentous forms of Histoplasma capsulatum and Blastomyces dermatitidis were inhibited by less than or equal to 2 microgram of either drug/ml; Coccidioides immitis was inhibited by less than or equal to 0.5 microgram of R41,400/ml. Among the yeasts tested, Cryptococcus neoformans and Candida parapsilosis were the most susceptibel to the two drugs, whereas Candida albicans and Candida tropicalis were the least susceptible; 0.5 microgram of either drug/ml was inhibitory for 90%-100% of tested isolates of C. neoformans but for only less than or equal to 20% of isolates of C. albicans, C. tropicalis, and Torulopsis glabrata. Both drugs were inhibitory for most isolates of Trichophyton and Microsporum species at concentrations of less than or equal to 4 microgram/ml; Epidermophyton floccosum was uniquely susceptible to both drugs.
This study was conducted to demonstrate the presence of pathogenic dematiaceous fungi in nature. Using hamster and mouse inoculation techniques, 43 isolates of dematiaceous fungi were recovered from 39 samples of woody plant material and soil from the Virginia environment. Thirteen species were identified and included 4 Phialophora spp., 3 Cladosporium spp., 2 Exophiala spp., Sporothrix sp., Wangiella dermatitidis, Bispora betulina, and Scytalidium lignicola. Evidence is presented for the first isolations of C. trichoides from nature in the United States; these isolates proved to be pathogenic for mice in which they produced disease and death in a course similar to that seen in man. Natural isolates of Phialophora verrucosa, Phialophora repens, Exophiala jeanselmei, and Wangiella dermatitidis were identical to those species isolated from man using the following criteria: morphology, 12% gelatin reaction, and survival in laboratory animals.
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