Fungi Flashcards
What are the three ways in which fungi can be classified?
Unicellular (yeast)
Filamentous (mould)
Dimorphic (can switch between the above two forms)
List some features of unicellular fungi
Yeasts are facultative anaerobes, asexual reproduction (budding), they can produce colonies on agar (commonly confused for bacteria but their colonies are larger), mainly invade host via the respiratory epithelium
List some features of Filamentous fungi
Aerobes
Asexual reproduction (conidia - spores)
Produce mycelia on agar
Have hypha (long multicellular filaments)
List the types of fungi in descending virulence
Dimorphic fungi (filamentous in environment and yeast form when infect us)
Dermatophytes (ringworm grows where kerratin is - hair and skin. Heal from the inside out)
Agents of subcutaneous myocytes ( low grade infections)
Opportunists
Toxic fungi (toxins diffuse through bread or tomato)
What do dermatophytes cause
Tinea
What type of sample would you collect for investigation of Dermatophytes?
Skin scraping
What are the three genera of Dermatophytes?
Microsporum
Trichophyton
Epidermophyton
Each has preferences for different tissues
Why can humans handle a large amount of fungi but only a small amount of bacteria (before we get very sick)
Fungi do not have PAMPS and do not stimulate the immune system efficiently
List some examples of subcutaneous mycoses
Mycetoma (fungi + tumor) can have a bacterial cause of a fungal cause (eumycetoma). This is significant because the Rx is different for each cause - NO OVERLAP
Chromoblastomycosis
Phaeohyphomycosis`
What are some yeast examples of Opportunistic mycoses?
- Candidiasis: can be mucocutaneous, chronic mucocutaneous(in ppl with immunodeficiencies where they cannot clear infections) or systemic (septicaemia and death in neonates).
- Cryptococcus: Inhaled disease and can be fatal if it gets in to the blood stream This is an AIDS defining illness that causes pulmonary infections and meningitis ( symptoms are slow but fatal). Agents that cause this disease are C. neoformans (most common - has a massive capsule) and C. gatti (near river reg gum trees)
- Aspergillosis: Saprophytic (fungus ball grows in TB cavity), allergic or systemic
What methods can you use to diagnose fungal infections?
Microscopy Culture Antigen detection (for cryptococcus - latex agglutination). PCR (only some fungi) Other: Mass-spec ("black box")
How do you treat fungal infections?
Systemic: Polyenes (amphotericin B), triazoles, echinocandins, 5-flurocytosine
Topical: Polyenes, imidazoles
What are the targets of anti-fungal agents?
They target ergosterol, a cytoplasmic membrane structure that is like cholesterol.
Polyenes affect integrity while triazoles affect the synthesis of ergosterol
Other tagets include nucleic acids - 5-flurocytosine (prodrug) affects DNA and RNA synthesis. It doesn’t affect our DNA because we don’t have the necessary enzyme to activate it.
What is the treatment of systemic fungal infections
• Candida spp : fluconazole; amphotericin B;
caspofungin
• Cryptococcus : amphotericin B + 5-fluorocytosine
• Aspergillus : voriconazole; amphotericin B
• Dimorphic fungi : amphotericin B
Treatment of dermatophytosis
Non-specific: reduce fungal load
Topical:
• terbinafine (“Lamisil”)
• clotrimazole (“Canesten”)
• amorolfine (“Loceryl”)
Oral:
• terbinafine
• fluconazole
• griseofulvin