Abstract

Cryptococcosis is a human fungal infection of significant mortality and morbidity, especially in the meningoencephalitis form. Cryptococcosis is distributed worldwide and its agents, C. neoformans and C. gattii, present eight major molecular types—VNI-VNIV and VGI-VGIV respectively. The primary cryptococcosis caused by molecular type VGII (serotype B, MAT alpha) prevails in immunocompetent patients in the North and Northeast of Brazil, revealing an endemic regional pattern to this molecular type. Since 1999, C. gattii VGII has been involved in an ongoing outbreak in Canada, and is expanding to the Northwest of the United States, two temperate regions. Exposure to propagules dispersed in the environment, related to various organic substrates, mainly decomposing wood in and around dwellings, initiates the infection process. The present study investigated the presence of the agents of cryptococcosis in dust from dwellings in the upper Rio Negro, municipality of Santa Isabel do Rio Negro in Amazonas state. Indoor dust was collected from 51 houses, diluted and plated on bird seed agar. Dark brown colonies were identified phenotypically, and genotypically by URA5 restriction fragment length polymorphism analysis and multilocus sequence typing (MLST). The mating type was identified using pheromone-specific primers. Three of the 51 houses were positive for C. gattii molecular type VGII, MATα and MATa, showing a high prevalence of this agent. MLST studies identified eight subtypes, VGIIb (ST7), VGIIa (ST20), (ST5) and 5 new subtypes unique to the region. For the first time in the state of Amazonas, C. gattii VGII MATα and MATa were isolated from the environment and correlates with endemic cryptococcosis in this state. This is the first description of MLST subtypes on environmental isolates in the Brazilian Amazon, indicating domiciliary dust as a potential source for human infection with different subtypes of C. gattii VGII MATα and MATa.

Highlights

  • Cryptococcosis is a life-threatening systemic mycosis affecting humans and animals worldwide

  • C. neoformans is classified into the major molecular types VNI/AFLP1 and VNII/AFLP1A and AFLP1B, VNIII/AFLP3, and VNIV/AFLP2, while C. gattii correspond to VGI/AFLP4, VGII/AFLP6, VGIII/AFLP5, and VGIV/AFLP7, all corresponding to serotypes B and/or C [8]

  • Two studies, originated from index-cases of aids-associated cryptococcosis in South America and Africa, showed similar results: in Rio de Janeiro, southeast of Brazil, the investigation of 77 dwellings revealed the isolation of C. neoformans from domestic dust in 11 (14.3%) [21], and some years earlier in Bujumbura, Burundi, C. neoformans was isolated from domestic dust in 13 (54%) out of 24 dwellings studied [30]

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Summary

Introduction

Cryptococcosis is a life-threatening systemic mycosis affecting humans and animals worldwide. The disease is acquired by inhalation of infectious propagules (desiccated yeasts cells or basidiospores) of the members of the Cryptococcus neoformans/C. gattii species complex from the environment. Cryptococcosis by C. neoformans is cosmopolitan, affecting mainly immunocompromised individuals, especially patients with AIDS [2]. Molecular epidemiological studies have identified eight major molecular types within the Cryptococcus neoformans/C. gattii species complex. To globally standardize genotyping of the C. neoformans/C. gattii species complex, a MLST scheme was established by the ISHAM working group “Genotyping C. neoformans and C. gattii” based on variable regions of seven independent genetic loci: CAP59, GPD1, LAC1, PLB1, SOD1, URA5 and the IGS1 region, taking advantage of the high discriminatory power and good reproducibility between different laboratories [8]. The allele (AT) and sequence types (ST) of the ISHAM consensus MLST scheme can be determined via the web page at http://mlst.mycologylab.org/

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