Cladophialophora bantiana

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Cladophialophora bantiana
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Fungi
Division: Ascomycota
Class: Eurotiomycetes
Order: Chaetothyriales
Family: Herpotrichiellaceae
Genus: Cladophialophora
Species:
C. bantiana
Binomial name
Cladophialophora bantiana
de Hoog, Kwon-Chung & McGinnis, (1995)
Synonyms

Torula bantiana Sacc., in Saccardo, (1912)
Cladosporium bantianum (Sacc.) Borelli, (1960)
Xylohypha bantiana (Sacc.) McGinnis, Borelli, Padhye & Ajello, (1986)
Cladosporium trichoides C.W. Emmons Binford, Thompson & Gorham, (1952)
Cladosporium trichoides C.W. Emmons var. trichoides Binford, Thompson & Gorham, (1952)
Cladosporium trichoides var. chlamydosporum Kwon-Chung, (1978)

Cladophialophora bantiana (C. bantiana) is a melanin producing mold known to cause brain abscesses in humans.[1] It is one of the most common causes of systemic phaeohyphomycosis in mammals.[2] Cladophialophora bantiana is a member of the ascomycota and has been isolated from soil samples from around the world.[3]

Cladophialophora bantiana was first isolated from a brain abscess in 1911 by Guido Banti and was described by Pier Andrea Saccardo in 1912 as Torula bantiana. In 1960, the fungus was reclassified by Borelli as Cladosporium bantianum.[2] A morphologically similar species, Cladosporium trichodes was described by Emmons et al. in 1952. Cladosporium trichodes was widely believed to be a different species until 1995 when de Hoog et al. showed it to be conspecific with C. bantiana based on phylogenetic analysis.[4]

Morphology

Cladophialophora bantiana exhibits predominantly hyphal growth both in vivo and in vitro.[5] The normal morphology consists of dark coloured largely unbranched, wavy chains of conidia, individually 5–10 μm in length.[5] The dark colour is due to the presence of the dark pigment melanin.[6] Hyphae are septate, as is the case for species belonging to the phylum ascomycota.[1]

In culture, the colony is black with a velvety texture or dark grey in color, depending on the type of agar medium it is grown on.[2] It grows on routine fungal culture media, including potato dextrose agar, oatmeal agar, and malt agar.[7] Cladophialophora bantiana has been reported to grow in culture under temperatures ranging from 14-42 °C with optimal growth around 30 °C.[2] Cladophialophora bantiana grows slowly in vitro, taking ~15 days to mature when grown at 25–30 °C.[1] Cladophialophora bantiana can be distinguished from other species of the genus Cladophialophora by the presence of the enzyme urease.[8]

In samples isolated from cerebral tissue compared to cultured samples, a predominance of unbranched conidial chains and absence of conidiophores has been reported.[5][6] For visualization of hyphal elements in brain abscesses, Fontana-Masson or lactophenol cotton blue staining can be used. [9]

Infection

Treatment

References

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