Author/Authors :
Rezaei-Matehkolaei, A Dept. of Medical Parasitology & Mycology - School of Public Health - National Institute of Health Research - Tehran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran , Shidfar, MR Dept. of Medical Parasitology & Mycology - School of Public Health - National Institute of Health Research - Tehran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran , Zaini, F Dept. of Medical Parasitology & Mycology - School of Public Health - National Institute of Health Research - Tehran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran , Jalalizand, N Dept. of Medical Parasitology & Mycology - School of Public Health - National Institute of Health Research - Tehran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran , Nouripour-Sisakht, S Dept. of Medical Parasitology & Mycology - School of Public Health - National Institute of Health Research - Tehran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran , Hosseinpour, L Dept. of Medical Parasitology & Mycology - School of Public Health - National Institute of Health Research - Tehran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran , Mirhendi, H Dept. of Medical Parasitology & Mycology - School of Public Health - National Institute of Health Research - Tehran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran , Makimura, K Teikyo University Institute of Medical Mycology, Tokyo , Eshraghian, MR Dept. of Biostatistics and Epidemiology - School of Public Health - Tehran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran
Abstract :
Background: Dermatophytes are the most common causative agents of superficial mycoses. Species identification of
these fungi is important from therapeutic and epidemiological point of wive. Traditional approaches for identification of
dermatophytes at the species level, relying on macroscopic and microscopic features of the colonies, usually are timeconsuming
and unreliable in many circumstances. Recently a broad varieties of rapid and accurate DNA-based
techniques were successfuly utilized for species delineation of dermatophytes.
Methods: The ITS1-5.8S-ITS2 region of rDNA from various reference strains of dermatophyte species were amplified
using the universal fungal primers ITS1 and ITS4.The PCR products were digested by a single restriction enzyme,
MvaI. The enzyme was evaluated in both in silico and practical PCR-RFLP assay to find the exact differentiating
restriction profiles for each species. To validate the standardized PCR-RFLP system, all tested strains were subjected to
sequencing and sequence analysis.
Results: The obtained RFLP patterns were specific for many species including T. interdigitale, T. rubrum, T.
violaceum, M. persicolor, M. audouinii, M. nanum (A. obtusum) and E. floccosum but were similar for some closely
related species such as M. canis / M. ferrugineum. Sequencing of the ITS1-5.8S-ITS2 fragment from all type strains
affirmed the RFLP findings.
Conclusion: It was practically revealed that the ITS-PCR followed by MvaI-RFLP is a useful and reliable schema for
identification and differentiation of several pathogenic species and can be used for rapid screening of even closely
related species of dermatophytes in clinical and epidemiological settings.
Keywords :
Dermatophytes , Identification , ITS , PCR-RFLP