Last data update: Mar 21, 2025. (Total: 48935 publications since 2009)
Records 1-10 (of 10 Records) |
Query Trace: Misas E[original query] |
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Molecular and epidemiological investigation of fluconazole-resistant Candida parapsilosis-Georgia, United States, 2021
Misas E , Witt LS , Farley MM , Thomas S , Jenkins EN , Gade L , Peterson JG , Mesa Restrepo A , Fridkin S , Lockhart SR , Chow NA , Lyman M . Open Forum Infect Dis 2024 11 (6) ofae264 ![]() ![]() BACKGROUND: Reports of fluconazole-resistant Candida parapsilosis bloodstream infections are increasing. We describe a cluster of fluconazole-resistant C parapsilosis bloodstream infections identified in 2021 on routine surveillance by the Georgia Emerging Infections Program in conjunction with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. METHODS: Whole-genome sequencing was used to analyze C parapsilosis bloodstream infections isolates. Epidemiological data were obtained from medical records. A social network analysis was conducted using Georgia Hospital Discharge Data. RESULTS: Twenty fluconazole-resistant isolates were identified in 2021, representing the largest proportion (34%) of fluconazole-resistant C parapsilosis bloodstream infections identified in Georgia since surveillance began in 2008. All resistant isolates were closely genetically related and contained the Y132F mutation in the ERG11 gene. Patients with fluconazole-resistant isolates were more likely to have resided at long-term acute care hospitals compared with patients with susceptible isolates (P = .01). There was a trend toward increased mechanical ventilation and prior azole use in patients with fluconazole-resistant isolates. Social network analysis revealed that patients with fluconazole-resistant isolates interfaced with a distinct set of healthcare facilities centered around 2 long-term acute care hospitals compared with patients with susceptible isolates. CONCLUSIONS: Whole-genome sequencing results showing that fluconazole-resistant C parapsilosis isolates from Georgia surveillance demonstrated low genetic diversity compared with susceptible isolates and their association with a facility network centered around 2 long-term acute care hospitals suggests clonal spread of fluconazole-resistant C parapsilosis. Further studies are needed to better understand the sudden emergence and transmission of fluconazole-resistant C parapsilosis. |
Emergence of zoonotic sporotrichosis in Brazil: a genomic epidemiology study
Ribeiro Dos Santos A , Misas E , Min B , Le N , Bagal UR , Parnell LA , Sexton DJ , Lockhart SR , de Souza Carvalho Melhem M , Takahashi JPF , Oliboni GM , Bonfieti LX , Cappellano P , Sampaio JLM , Araujo LS , Alves Filho HL , Venturini J , Chiller TM , Litvintseva AP , Chow NA . Lancet Microbe 2024 ![]() ![]() BACKGROUND: Zoonotic sporotrichosis is a neglected fungal disease, whereby outbreaks are primarily driven by Sporothrix brasiliensis and linked to cat-to-human transmission. To understand the emergence and spread of sporotrichosis in Brazil, the epicentre of the current epidemic in South America, we aimed to conduct whole-genome sequencing (WGS) to describe the genomic epidemiology. METHODS: In this genomic epidemiology study, we included Sporothrix spp isolates from sporotrichosis cases from Brazil, Colombia, and the USA. We conducted WGS using Illumina NovaSeq on isolates collected by three laboratories in Brazil from humans and cats with sporotrichosis between 2013 and 2022. All isolates that were confirmed to be Sporothrix genus by internal transcribed spacer or beta-tubulin PCR sequencing were included in this study. We downloaded eight Sporothrix genome sequences from the National Center for Biotechnology Information (six from Brazil, two from Colombia). Three Sporothrix spp genome sequences from the USA were generated by the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention as part of this study. We did phylogenetic analyses and correlated geographical and temporal case distribution with genotypic features of Sporothrix spp isolates. FINDINGS: 72 Sporothrix spp isolates from 55 human and 17 animal sporotrichosis cases were included: 67 (93%) were from Brazil, two (3%) from Colombia, and three (4%) from the USA. Cases spanned from 1999 to 2022. Most (61 [85%]) isolates were S brasiliensis, and all were reported from Brazil. Ten (14%) were Sporothrix schenckii and were reported from Brazil, USA, and Colombia. For S schenckii isolates, two distinct clades were observed wherein isolates clustered by geography. For S brasiliensis isolates, five clades separated by more than 100 000 single-nucleotide polymorphisms were observed. Among the five S brasiliensis clades, clades A and C contained isolates from both human and cat cases, and clade A contained isolates from six different states in Brazil. Compared with S brasiliensis isolates, larger genetic diversity was observed among S schenckii isolates from animal and human cases within a clade. INTERPRETATION: Our results suggest that the ongoing epidemic driven by S brasiliensis in Brazil represents several, independent emergence events followed by animal-to-animal and animal-to human transmission within and between Brazilian states. These results describe how S brasiliensis can emerge and spread within a country. FUNDING: Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior, Brazil; the São Paulo Research Foundation; Productivity in Research fellowships by the National Council for Scientific and Technological Development, and Ministry of Science and Technology of Brazil. |
Genomic epidemiology and antifungal-resistant characterization of Candida auris, Colombia, 2016-2021
Misas E . mSphere 2024 9 (2) e0057723 ![]() ![]() Since 2016, in Colombia, ongoing transmission of Candida auris has been reported in multiple cities. Here, we provide an updated description of C. auris genomic epidemiology and the dynamics of antifungal resistance in Colombia. We sequenced 99 isolates from C. auris cases with collection dates ranging from June 2016 to January 2021; the resulting sequences coupled with 103 previously generated sequences from C. auris cases were described in a phylogenetic analysis. All C. auris cases were clade IV. Of the 182 isolates with antifungal susceptibility data, 67 (37%) were resistant to fluconazole, and 39 (21%) were resistant to amphotericin B. Isolates predominately clustered by country except for 16 isolates from Bogotá, Colombia, which grouped with isolates from Venezuela. The largest cluster (N = 166 isolates) contained two subgroups. The first subgroup contained 26 isolates, mainly from César; of these, 85% (N = 22) were resistant to fluconazole. The second subgroup consisted of 47 isolates from the north coast; of these, 81% (N = 38) were resistant to amphotericin B. Mutations in the ERG11 and TAC1B genes were identified in fluconazole-resistant isolates. This work describes molecular mechanisms associated with C. auris antifungal resistance in Colombia. Overall, C. auris cases from different geographic locations in Colombia exhibited high genetic relatedness, suggesting continued transmission between cities since 2016. These findings also suggest a lack of or minimal introductions of different clades of C. auris into Colombia. IMPORTANCE: Candida auris is an emerging fungus that presents a serious global health threat and has caused multiple outbreaks in Colombia. This work discusses the likelihood of introductions and local transmission of C. auris and provides an updated description of the molecular mechanisms associated with antifungal resistance in Colombia. Efforts like this provide information about the evolving C. auris burden that could help guide public health strategies to control C. auris spread. |
Genomic description of acquired fluconazole- and echinocandin-resistance in patients with serial Candida glabrata isolates
Misas E , Seagle E , Jenkins EN , Rajeev M , Hurst S , Nunnally NS , Bentz ML , Lyman MM , Berkow E , Harrison LH , Schaffner W , Markus TM , Pierce R , Farley MM , Chow NA , Lockhart SR , Litvintseva AP . J Clin Microbiol 2024 e0114023 ![]() ![]() Candida glabrata is one of the most common causes of systemic candidiasis, often resistant to antifungal medications. To describe the genomic context of emerging resistance, we conducted a retrospective analysis of 82 serially collected isolates from 33 patients from population-based candidemia surveillance in the United States. We used whole-genome sequencing to determine the genetic relationships between isolates obtained from the same patient. Phylogenetic analysis demonstrated that isolates from 29 patients were clustered by patient. The median SNPs between isolates from the same patient was 30 (range: 7-96 SNPs), while unrelated strains infected four patients. Twenty-one isolates were resistant to echinocandins, and 24 were resistant to fluconazole. All echinocandin-resistant isolates carried a mutation either in the FKS1 or FKS2 HS1 region. Of the 24 fluconazole-resistant isolates, 17 (71%) had non-synonymous polymorphisms in the PDR1 gene, which were absent in susceptible isolates. In 11 patients, a genetically related resistant isolate was collected after recovering susceptible isolates, indicating in vivo acquisition of resistance. These findings allowed us to estimate the intra-host diversity of C. glabrata and propose an upper boundary of 96 SNPs for defining genetically related isolates, which can be used to assess donor-to-host transmission, nosocomial transmission, or acquired resistance.IMPORTANCEIn our study, mutations associated to azole resistance and echinocandin resistance were detected in Candida glabrata isolates using a whole-genome sequence. C. glabrata is the second most common cause of candidemia in the United States, which rapidly acquires resistance to antifungals, in vitro and in vivo. |
Genomic description of human clinical Aspergillus fumigatus isolates, California, 2020.
Misas E , Deng JZ , Gold JAW , Gade L , Nunnally NS , Georgacopoulos O , Bentz M , Berkow EL , Litvintseva AP , Chiller TM , Klausner JD , Chow NA . Med Mycol 2023 61 (2) ![]() ![]() Aspergillus fumigatus, an environmental mold, causes life-threatening infections. Studies on the phylogenetic structure of human clinical A. fumigatus isolates are limited. Here, we performed whole-genome sequencing of 24 A. fumigatus isolates collected from 18 patients in U.S. healthcare facilities in California. Single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) differences between patient isolates ranged from 187-70 829 SNPs. For five patients with multiple isolates, we calculated the within-host diversities. Three patients had a within-host diversity that ranged from 4-10 SNPs and two patients ranged from 2-16 977 SNPs. Findings revealed highly diverse A. fumigatus strains among patients and two patterns of diversity for isolates that come from the same patient, low and extremely high diversity. | Aspergillus fumigatus is an environmental mold. It can cause a severe infection called aspergillosis in patients with weakened immune systems. We analyzed A. fumigatus DNA from patients at California hospitals. We described genetic diversity between samples from the same patients and among different patients. Our findings provide insight on using genomic sequencing to investigate aspergillosis in hospitals. | eng |
Investigation of a Candida auris outbreak in a Skilled Nursing Facility - Virginia, United States, October 2020-June 2021.
Waters A , Chommanard C , Baltozer S , Angel LC , Abdelfattah R , Lyman M , Forsberg K , Misas E , Litvintseva AP , Fields V , Lineberger S , Bernard S . Am J Infect Control 2022 51 (4) 472-474 ![]() Candida auris, an emerging multi-drug resistant organism (MDRO), is an urgent public health threat. We report on a C. auris outbreak investigation at a Virginia ventilator skilled nursing facility (vSNF). During October 2020-June 2021, we identified 28 cases among residents in the ventilator unit. Genomic evidence suggested ≥2 distinct C. auris introductions to the facility. We identified multiple infection and prevention control challenges, highlighting the importance of strengthening MDRO prevention efforts at vSNFs. |
MycoSNP: A Portable Workflow for Performing Whole-Genome Sequencing Analysis of Candida auris.
Bagal UR , Phan J , Welsh RM , Misas E , Wagner D , Gade L , Litvintseva AP , Cuomo CA , Chow NA . Methods Mol Biol 2022 2517 215-228 ![]() ![]() Candida auris is an urgent public health threat characterized by high drug-resistant rates and rapid spread in healthcare settings worldwide. As part of the C. auris response, molecular surveillance has helped public health officials track the global spread and investigate local outbreaks. Here, we describe whole-genome sequencing analysis methods used for routine C. auris molecular surveillance in the United States; methods include reference selection, reference preparation, quality assessment and control of sequencing reads, read alignment, and single-nucleotide polymorphism calling and filtration. We also describe the newly developed pipeline MycoSNP, a portable workflow for performing whole-genome sequencing analysis of fungal organisms including C. auris. |
Candida auris Whole-Genome Sequence Benchmark Dataset for Phylogenomic Pipelines
Welsh RM , Misas E , Forsberg K , Lyman M , Chow NA . J Fungi (Basel) 2021 7 (3) ![]() ![]() Candida auris is a multidrug-resistant pathogen that represents a serious public health threat due to its rapid global emergence, increasing incidence of healthcare-associated outbreaks, and high rates of antifungal resistance. Whole-genome sequencing and genomic surveillance have the potential to bolster C. auris surveillance networks moving forward. Laboratories conducting genomic surveillance need to be able to compare analyses from various national and international surveillance partners to ensure that results are mutually trusted and understood. Therefore, we established an empirical outbreak benchmark dataset consisting of 23 C. auris genomes to help validate comparisons of genomic analyses and facilitate communication among surveillance networks. Our outbreak benchmark dataset represents a polyclonal phylogeny with three subclades. The genomes in this dataset are from well-vetted studies that are supported by multiple lines of evidence, which demonstrate that the whole-genome sequencing data, phylogenetic tree, and epidemiological data are all in agreement. This C. auris benchmark set allows for standardized comparisons of phylogenomic pipelines, ultimately promoting effective C. auris collaborations. |
Mitochondrial Genome Sequences of the Emerging Fungal Pathogen Candida auris .
Misas E , Chow NA , Gómez OM , Muñoz JF , McEwen JG , Litvintseva AP , Clay OK . Front Microbiol 2020 11 560332 ![]() ![]() Candida auris is an emerging fungal pathogen capable of causing invasive infections in humans. Since its first appearance around 1996, it has been isolated in countries spanning five continents. C. auris is a yeast that has the potential to cause outbreaks in hospitals, can survive in adverse conditions, including dry surfaces and high temperatures, and has been frequently misidentified by traditional methods. Furthermore, strains have been identified that are resistant to two and even all three of the main classes of antifungals currently in use. Several nuclear genome assemblies of C. auris have been published representing different clades and continents, yet until recently, the mitochondrial genomes (mtDNA chromosomes) of this species and the closely related species of C. haemulonii, C. duobushaemulonii, and C. pseudohaemulonii had not been analyzed in depth. We used reads from PacBio and Illumina sequencing to obtain a de novo reference assembly of the mitochondrial genome of the C. auris clade I isolate B8441 from Pakistan. This assembly has a total size of 28.2 kb and contains 13 core protein-coding genes, 25 tRNAs and the 12S and 16S ribosomal subunits. We then performed a comparative analysis by aligning Illumina reads of 129 other isolates from South Asia, Japan, South Africa, and South America with the B8441 reference. The clades of the phylogenetic tree we obtained from the aligned mtDNA sequences were consistent with those derived from the nuclear genome. The mitochondrial genome revealed a generally low genetic variation within clades, although the South Asian clade displayed two sub-branches including strains from both Pakistan and India. In particular, the 86 isolates from Colombia and Venezuela had mtDNA sequences that were all identical at the base level, i.e., a single conserved haplotype or mitochondrial background that exhibited characteristic differences from the Pakistan reference isolate B8441, such as a unique 25-nt insert that may affect function. |
Molecular epidemiology of Candida auris in Colombia reveals a highly-related, country-wide colonization with regional patterns in Amphotericin B resistance.
Escandon P , Chow NA , Caceres DH , Gade L , Berkow EL , Armstrong P , Rivera S , Misas E , Duarte C , Moulton-Meissner H , Welsh RM , Parra C , Pescador LA , Villalobos N , Salcedo S , Berrio I , Varon C , Espinosa-Bode A , Lockhart SR , Jackson BR , Litvintseva AP , Beltran M , Chiller TM . Clin Infect Dis 2018 68 (1) 15-21 ![]() Background: Candida auris is a multidrug-resistant yeast associated with hospital outbreaks worldwide. During 2015-2016, multiple outbreaks were reported in Colombia. We aimed to understand the extent of contamination in healthcare settings and to characterize the molecular epidemiology of C. auris in Colombia. Methods: We sampled patients, patient contacts, healthcare workers, and the environment in four hospitals with recent C. auris outbreaks. Using standardized protocols, people were swabbed at different body sites. Patient and procedure rooms were sectioned into four zones and surfaces were swabbed. We performed whole-genome sequencing (WGS) and antifungal susceptibility testing (AFST) on all isolates. Results: Seven (41%) of the 17 people swabbed were found to be colonized. C. auris was isolated from 37/322 (12%) environmental samples. These were collected from a variety of items in all four zones. WGS and AFST revealed that although isolates were similar throughout the country, isolates from the northern region were genetically distinct and more resistant to amphotericin B (AmB) than the isolates from central Colombia. Four novel non-synonymous mutations were found to be significantly associated with AmB resistance. Conclusions: Our results show that extensive C. auris contamination can occur and highlight the importance of adherence to appropriate infection control practices and disinfection strategies. Observed genetic diversity supports healthcare transmission and a recent expansion of C. auris within Colombia with divergent AmB susceptibility. |
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