4.2 Article

New methylene blue-mediated photodynamic inactivation of multidrug-resistant Fonsecaea nubica infected chromoblastomycosis in vitro

Journal

BRAZILIAN JOURNAL OF MICROBIOLOGY
Volume 54, Issue 2, Pages 873-883

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s42770-023-00974-8

Keywords

Chromoblastomycosis; Fonsecaea nubica; Photodynamic treatment; New methylene blue; Multidrug-resistance

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The study evaluated the effect of new methylene blue (NMB)-induced photodynamic therapy (PDT) on multidrug-resistant chromoblastomycosis. The results showed that NMB-PDT could effectively inactivate drug-resistant chromoblastomycosis in vitro, suggesting its potential as an alternative or adjuvant treatment for refractory cases.
Chromoblastomycosis is a fungal disease presented with local warty papule, plaque, and verrucous nodules. In addition, the incidence and drug resistance of chromoblastomycosis are increasing each year worldwide. Photodynamic therapy is a promising method to treat mycoses. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the effect of new methylene blue (NMB)-induced PDT on multidrug-resistant chromoblastomycosis in vitro. We isolated one wild-type strain pathogen from one clinical patient diagnosed with chromoblastomycosis for over 27 years. The pathogen was identified by histopathology, the morphology of fungal culture, and genetic testing. Drug susceptibility testing was performed on the isolate. It was cultured with logarithmic growth phase spore in vitro and incubated with different concentrations of NMB for 30 min, and received illumination by red light-emitted diode with different light doses. After photodynamic treatment, the scanning electron microscopy (SEM) and transmission electron microscopy (TEM) were conducted. The pathogen was Fonsecaea nubica, and it was resistant to itraconazole, terbinafine, amphotericin B, voriconazole andcaspofungin. At the same NMB concentration, the sterilization efficiency of NMB-photodynamic therapy (PDT) on F. nubica increased with increasing light intensity; F. nubica was completely killed at 25 mu mol/L NMB with a light dose of 40 J/cm(2) or 50 mu mol/L NMB and light doses of >= 30 J/cm(2). SEM and TEM observed ultrastructural changes after PDT. NMB-PDT inactivates the survival of multidrug-resistant F. nubica in vitro; it therefore has the potential to become an alternative or adjuvant treatment for refractory chromoblastomycosis.

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