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Characterization of a lipopeptide-resistant strain ofCandida albicans

Authors :
Amber Shadron
Melinda Knapp
David J. Frost
Kim Brandt
Robert C. Goldman
Source :
Canadian Journal of Microbiology. 43:122-128
Publication Year :
1997
Publisher :
Canadian Science Publishing, 1997.

Abstract

Lipopeptides are antifungal agents that inhibit cell wall β-(1, 3)-glucan biosynthesis in fungal organisms. A mutant resistant to lipopeptides was generated by UV mutagenesis and characterized. The Candida albicans mutant (LP3-1) was stable and showed resistance specificity to a broad range of lipopeptides and certain glycolipid inhibitors. Other antifungal agents with diverse modes of action had a normal minimum inhibitory concentration profile for LP3-1 compared with the wild-type strain (CCH 442). In the in vitro β-(1, 3)-glucan synthase assay, both the lipopeptides and papulacandin-related agents had considerably higher 50% inhibitory concentration values in the LP3-1 strain than in the wild-type strain. In reconstitution assays, the resistance factor was associated with the integral membrane pellet rather than the peripheral GTP-binding protein. The LP3-1 strain had a membrane lipid profile similar to that of the parent strain and was virulent in a murine model of systemic candidiasis. Taken together, these results indicate that the resistance factor is associated with the integral membrane component of β-(1, 3)-glucan synthase. Lipopeptides are common antifungal agents encountered during screening of natural products. The LP3-1 strain was resistant to natural product extracts known to contain various lipopeptides. Thus, LP3-1 can be used in a dereplication assay.Key words: Candida albicans, β-(1, 3)-glucan synthase, lipopeptides, drug resistance.

Details

ISSN :
14803275 and 00084166
Volume :
43
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Canadian Journal of Microbiology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....41f5fdaa61b96736b1d8b408b63abd3f
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1139/m97-016