Insights into Candida auris dispersal cells and their impact on antifungal resistance

Abstract The emerging Candidozyma auris (formerly known as Candida auris, C. auris) has caused several outbreaks globally. While several studies explored the resistant biofilm formed by C. auris, little is known regarding the cells dispersed following biofilm formation. Herein, I investigated and ch...

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Main Author: Bahgat Fayed
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2025-05-01
Series:BMC Microbiology
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Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s12866-025-04055-8
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author Bahgat Fayed
author_facet Bahgat Fayed
author_sort Bahgat Fayed
collection DOAJ
description Abstract The emerging Candidozyma auris (formerly known as Candida auris, C. auris) has caused several outbreaks globally. While several studies explored the resistant biofilm formed by C. auris, little is known regarding the cells dispersed following biofilm formation. Herein, I investigated and characterized the cells dispersed from C. auris biofilms. Cells dispersed from biofilm developed in 96 well plate were isolated and counted. The antifungal susceptibility testing showed that the dispersed cells display similar antifungal susceptibility as the parent planktonic cells, except amphotericin B. Gene expression analysis performed by quantitative real-time PCR indicated that dispersed cells can express genes coded for antifungal resistance (ERG2, ERG6, ERG11, FKS1, CHS1, CHS2, CDR1, MDR1) more than the parent planktonic cells. It was observed that dispersed cells can acquire resistance to caspofungin faster than the parent planktonic cells once exposed to caspofungin at sub MIC level. Furthermore, biofilms formed by dispersed cells displayed significantly higher metabolic activity, as indicated by the XTT analysis. To provide more insight, I explored the expression of genes coding for biofilm initiation and maturation and the data obtained indicated that dispersed cells overexpressed ALS5 and KRE6 genes. Further, GC-MS analysis indicated that dispersed cells exhibit altered metabolic profile that enhance cells survivability under stress and nutrient limit condition. The presented study is the first to explore C. auris dispersed cells and indicated that they are not able to revert to the planktonic mode once released from the biofilm.
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spelling doaj-art-ffa2db5b4fe64f6887f2e176efd32cf62025-08-20T03:22:11ZengBMCBMC Microbiology1471-21802025-05-0125111310.1186/s12866-025-04055-8Insights into Candida auris dispersal cells and their impact on antifungal resistanceBahgat Fayed0Department of Chemistry of Natural and Microbial Products, Pharmaceutical and Drug Industries Research Institute, National Research CentreAbstract The emerging Candidozyma auris (formerly known as Candida auris, C. auris) has caused several outbreaks globally. While several studies explored the resistant biofilm formed by C. auris, little is known regarding the cells dispersed following biofilm formation. Herein, I investigated and characterized the cells dispersed from C. auris biofilms. Cells dispersed from biofilm developed in 96 well plate were isolated and counted. The antifungal susceptibility testing showed that the dispersed cells display similar antifungal susceptibility as the parent planktonic cells, except amphotericin B. Gene expression analysis performed by quantitative real-time PCR indicated that dispersed cells can express genes coded for antifungal resistance (ERG2, ERG6, ERG11, FKS1, CHS1, CHS2, CDR1, MDR1) more than the parent planktonic cells. It was observed that dispersed cells can acquire resistance to caspofungin faster than the parent planktonic cells once exposed to caspofungin at sub MIC level. Furthermore, biofilms formed by dispersed cells displayed significantly higher metabolic activity, as indicated by the XTT analysis. To provide more insight, I explored the expression of genes coding for biofilm initiation and maturation and the data obtained indicated that dispersed cells overexpressed ALS5 and KRE6 genes. Further, GC-MS analysis indicated that dispersed cells exhibit altered metabolic profile that enhance cells survivability under stress and nutrient limit condition. The presented study is the first to explore C. auris dispersed cells and indicated that they are not able to revert to the planktonic mode once released from the biofilm.https://doi.org/10.1186/s12866-025-04055-8Candida auris- resistanceCaspofunginBiofilm
spellingShingle Bahgat Fayed
Insights into Candida auris dispersal cells and their impact on antifungal resistance
BMC Microbiology
Candida auris- resistance
Caspofungin
Biofilm
title Insights into Candida auris dispersal cells and their impact on antifungal resistance
title_full Insights into Candida auris dispersal cells and their impact on antifungal resistance
title_fullStr Insights into Candida auris dispersal cells and their impact on antifungal resistance
title_full_unstemmed Insights into Candida auris dispersal cells and their impact on antifungal resistance
title_short Insights into Candida auris dispersal cells and their impact on antifungal resistance
title_sort insights into candida auris dispersal cells and their impact on antifungal resistance
topic Candida auris- resistance
Caspofungin
Biofilm
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s12866-025-04055-8
work_keys_str_mv AT bahgatfayed insightsintocandidaaurisdispersalcellsandtheirimpactonantifungalresistance