Trichophyton rubrum, an anthropophilic dermatophyte fungus, is the predominant causative agent of superficial skin infections in human population. There are only scanty reports on drug susceptibility profiling of T. rubrum. Neither mechanisms for drug resistance development nor correlation between in vitro drug susceptibility and in vivo response to treatment is known for that species. In this study, changes in the in vitro susceptibilities to fluconazole (FLZ) and itraconazole (ITZ) among thirty T. rubrum clinical strains subjected to sequential passages in the presence or absence of the azoles were investigated. Each strain was passaged 12 times at 4-week intervals as three parallel cultures, maintained on a drug-free medium (1), and a medium containing FLZ (2) or ITZ (3) at subinhibitory concentrations. Susceptibility to FLZ and ITZ of the original strain and its 3 subcultures was determined by microdilution method. The MIC values of the two azoles remained unaltered for all T. rubrum strains tested, after 12 passages on a drug-free medium. Among the strains grown with FLZ, an increase in the MICs of FLZ and ITZ was noted in 17 (56.7 %) and 19 (63.3 %) strains, respectively. Increased MICs of ITZ and FLZ were demonstrated for 24 (80 %) and 20 (66.7 %) strains that were propagated with ITZ. The results indicate the capacity of T. rubrum to develop resistance toward the azoles after prolonged exposure to these drugs. Resistance of T. rubrum to azoles plays an important role in therapy failures and consequently contributes to persistence and chronicity of the infections.
Trichophyton tonsurans is an anthropophilic dermatophyte, with a worldwide distribution, although its prevalence varies considerably between different geographical regions. Whereas in North America infections due to this fungus are exceptionally common, on the European continent they appear relatively seldom. Although T. tonsurans is primarily associated with tinea capitis, it can also be the cause of tinea corporis and tinea unguium. The course of infection is usually only mildly symptomatic. We describe here two cases of urease-positive T. tonsurans infections with atypically extensive cutaneous lesions and severe inflammatory responses. .
Trichophyton rubrum is the most significant agent of dermatomycoses worldwide, primarily causing tinea pedis and tinea unguium. PCR analysis of tandemly repetitive subelements (TRS) within the rDNA nontranscribed spacer region is a major tool for molecular typing of T. rubrum. The aim of this study was to investigate the stability of TRS PCR patterns by analyzing isogenic strains of T. rubrum. Twenty-seven groups of isogenic T. rubrum strains were examined, each composed of an original clinical isolate and its 3 subcultures, maintained on a drug-free medium, a medium containing fluconazole and itraconazole. TRS typing was performed for the original strains and their subcultures grown after 12 passages, at 4-week intervals, on respective media. To add more objectivity to the results, TRS typing for each of the isogenic strain was performed three times, using DNA isolated from three different colonies. Among 27 groups of isogenic strains, all but one were exclusively composed of strains with identical TRS-1 and TRS-2 PCR patterns. In one group, 3 isolates from the last, twelfth passage had identical TRS-1 PCR profiles (type 1), yet different TRS-2 PCR profiles, as compared with the original strain (type I vs. type II). The mechanism underlying the genotype switch was a deletion of a single repeat unit in the TRS-2 locus, as evidenced by sequence analysis. In the interpretation of TRS typing results, microevolutionary events need to be taken into account, urging drawing epidemiological conclusions with caution and in conjunction with other genotyping data and traditional contact tracing information.
Fig. 1. Toe-nail onychomycosis induced by T. rubrum in 2 selected patients (I and II) before (a) and after (b) a 12-month therapy with FLZ (400 mg/week).
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