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Environmental siblings of black agents of human chromoblastomycosis 被引量:1
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作者 V.A.Vicente m.j.najafzadeh +5 位作者 Jiufeng Sun R.R.Gomes D.Robl S.G.Marques C.M.P.S.Azevedo G.S.de Hoog 《Fungal Diversity》 SCIE 2014年第2期47-63,共17页
Agents of human chromoblastomycosis,a skin disease almost exclusively caused by members of the order Chaetothyriales,are assumed to be traumatically inoculated into the skin with sharp environmental materials such as ... Agents of human chromoblastomycosis,a skin disease almost exclusively caused by members of the order Chaetothyriales,are assumed to be traumatically inoculated into the skin with sharp environmental materials such as plant thorns or wooden splinters carrying the respective opportunist.In the supposition that such fungi should have their main habitat in the environment,we investigated the occurrence of black fungi in living areas of patients with chromoblastomycosis.In South America Fonsecaea agents are prevalent as agents of the disease,while also related Cladophialophora species,known from other types of skin infections,are known from the continent.Ninety environmental isolates were preliminarily selected as possible agents of chromoblastomycosis,based on morphology.Judging from ITS sequence data isolates were attributed to the genera Cladophialophora,Cyphellophora,Exophiala,Fonsecaea,Phialophora,and Veronaea.A total of 45 fungi morphologically identified as Fonsecaea or Cladophialophora isolated from debris and thorns of living prickly plants in Brazil were processed for taxonomic studies.Phylogenetic analysis revealed that the isolates indeed belonged to the Chaetothyriales,but only rarely an agent of chromoblastomycosis was concerned;only two strains of F.pedrosoi and one F.monophora were isolated from debris plants.The remaining isolates belonged to hitherto unknown molecular siblings of Fonsecaea.Two novel taxa are introduced. 展开更多
关键词 Black yeasts Environmental isolation CHROMOBLASTOMYCOSIS Opportunistic fungi VIRULENCE Infection route
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Cyphellophora and its relatives in Phialophora: biodiversity and possible role in human infection 被引量:1
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作者 Peiying Feng Qiaoyun Lu +8 位作者 m.j.najafzadeh A.H.G.Gerrits van den Ende Jiufeng Sun Ruoyu Li Liyan Xi V.A.Vicente Wei Lai Chun Lu G.S.de Hoog 《Fungal Diversity》 SCIE 2014年第2期17-45,共29页
Cyphellophora is a genus of black yeast-like fungi characterised by having simple phialides with multiseptate,curved conidia.Judging from SSU and LSU data,Cyphellophora was found to be located in a well-supported clad... Cyphellophora is a genus of black yeast-like fungi characterised by having simple phialides with multiseptate,curved conidia.Judging from SSU and LSU data,Cyphellophora was found to be located in a well-supported clade within the Chaetothyriales comprising a number of species occurring on human skin and nail.Cyphellophora is phylogenetically close to Phialophora europaea,P.reptans and P.oxyspora,though morphologically these species produce singlecelled phialoconidia rather than multiseptate ones.Pseudomicrodochium suttonii and P.fusarioides have dark colonies and phylogenetically fit in with Cyphellophora;the type species of Pseudomicrodochium,P.aciculare,has similar,septate conidia but has a hyaline thallus.In the present study,multilocus phylogenetic analyses were combined with morphology and physiology.Sequences of the internal transcribed spacer region,the DNA dependent RNA polymerase II largest subunit and the partial beta tubulin gene were analysed for a set of 30 strains.Two novel species,Cyphellophora pauciseptata and Phialophora ambigua were discovered.Cyphellophora eucalypti was reduced to synonymy of C.guyanensis.The role of the studied fungi between colonization and infection of human skin was discussed.Putative virulence factors for these black yeast-like fungi were hypothesized to be the ability to assimilate monoaromatic hydrocarbons,to produce melanin pigments,and to tolerate the temperature of epidermal human skin. 展开更多
关键词 Black yeasts CHAETOTHYRIALES Cyphellophora PHIALOPHORA Superficial infection TAXONOMY
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Chaetomium-like fungi causing opportunistic infections in humans:a possible role for extremotolerance
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作者 Sarah A.Ahmed Ziauddin Khan +16 位作者 Xue-wei Wang Tarek A.A.Moussa Hassan S.Al-Zahrani Omar A.A.lmaghrabi Deanna A.Sutton S.Ahmad Johannes Z.Groenewald A.Alastruey-Izquierdo Anne van Diepeningen S.B.J.Menken m.j.najafzadeh Pedro W.Crous Oliver Cornely Axel Hamprecht Maria J.G.T.Vehreschild A.J.Kindo G.Sybren de Hoog 《Fungal Diversity》 SCIE 2016年第1期11-26,共16页
Members of the family Chaetomiaceae are ubiquitous ascosporulating fungi commonly,which reside in soil enriched with manure or cellulosic materials.Their role as human pathogens is largely ignored.However,the ability ... Members of the family Chaetomiaceae are ubiquitous ascosporulating fungi commonly,which reside in soil enriched with manure or cellulosic materials.Their role as human pathogens is largely ignored.However,the ability of some species to grow at high temperature enables them to play an important role as opportunistic pathogens.The family contains several genera and species that have never been reported to cause human infection.Hereby,three new species are described;two belong to the genus Subramaniula and one represents a Chaetomium species.Subramaniula asteroides was isolated from various sources including eye and skin infections as well as from the natural environment,and S.obscura was isolated from a toe infection.Chaetomium anamorphosum was isolated from a kidney transplant patient suffering from fungal peritonitis.All species described were previously misidentified as Papulaspora spp.due to the formation of cellular clumps or bulbil-like structures,which are characteristic of Papulaspora.The isolates failed to form sexual fruit bodies and ascospores remained absent,which is an unusual feature for the generally ascosporulating genera Chaetomium and Subramaniula;minute conidia from phialides were sometimes observed. 展开更多
关键词 CHAETOMIUM Desert fungi KERATITIS Papulaspora PERITONITIS Sterile fungi Subramaniula
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