Lockhart S R, Reed B D, Pierson C L, Soll D R
Department of Biological Sciences, University of Iowa, Iowa City 52242, USA.
J Clin Microbiol. 1996 Apr;34(4):767-77. doi: 10.1128/jcm.34.4.767-777.1996.
The following three basic scenarios have emerged for the genetic relatedness of strains in recurrent vaginal candidiasis: strain maintenance without genetic variation, strain maintenance with minor genetic variation, and strain replacement. To test the frequency of each of the three scenarios, the genetic relatedness of Candida albicans isolates from each of 18 patients with recurrent infections was assessed by sequential DNA fingerprinting with the following three probes: the Ca3 probe; the C1 probe, a subfragment of the Ca3 probe which hybridizes to hypervariable genomic fragments; and the unrelated CARE2 probe. In each of the 18 patients with recurrent infections, the same strain was responsible for sequential infections, suggesting that the predominant scenario is strain maintenance. However, in 56% of these patients, the strain exhibited minor genetic variations in sequential infections. These changes were not found to be progressive. Rather, the changes suggest that substrains of an established infecting strain are shuffled in sequential infections. Results are also presented that in 45% of patients with recurrent infections, oral and vulvovaginal isolates were identical, in 35% they were highly related but not identical, and in 20% they were unrelated. These results differ markedly from those for commensal isolates simultaneously cultured from the oral cavity and vulvovaginal region of healthy individuals. Finally, it is demonstrated that in all eight cases in which C. albicans was isolated from both the male sexual partner of the patient with a recurrent infection and the patient, an isolate from the male partner was identical or highly related to the vulvovaginal strain. These results demonstrate that in patients with recurrent vulvovaginitis, a single strain usually dominates both in the different body locations of the patient and in the male partner and that it is maintained through sequential infections. However, in patients with recurrent infections, different substrains of the established clone dominate in an apparently random fashion, a process that we refer to as "substrain shuffling".
无基因变异的菌株维持、有微小基因变异的菌株维持以及菌株替换。为了检测这三种情况各自出现的频率,通过使用以下三种探针进行连续DNA指纹分析,评估了18例复发性感染患者各自的白色念珠菌分离株的遗传相关性:Ca3探针;C1探针,Ca3探针的一个亚片段,可与高变基因组片段杂交;以及不相关的CARE2探针。在18例复发性感染患者中,同一菌株导致了连续感染,这表明主要情况是菌株维持。然而,在这些患者中,56%的菌株在连续感染中表现出微小的基因变异。这些变化并非渐进性的。相反,这些变化表明在连续感染中,已确定的感染菌株的亚菌株会发生重排。研究结果还表明,在45%的复发性感染患者中,口腔和外阴阴道分离株是相同的,35%的患者中它们高度相关但不相同,20%的患者中它们不相关。这些结果与从健康个体的口腔和外阴阴道区域同时培养的共生分离株的结果明显不同。最后,结果表明,在从复发性感染患者的男性性伴侣和患者中均分离出白色念珠菌的所有8例病例中,男性伴侣的分离株与外阴阴道菌株相同或高度相关。这些结果表明,在复发性外阴阴道炎患者中,单一菌株通常在患者的不同身体部位以及男性伴侣中占主导地位,并且通过连续感染得以维持。然而,在复发性感染患者中,已建立克隆的不同亚菌株以明显随机的方式占主导地位,我们将这一过程称为“亚菌株重排”。