Litcius/Paper detail

Role of the extracellular matrix in <i>Candida</i> biofilm antifungal resistance

Justin Massey, Robert Żarnowski, David R. Andes

2023FEMS Microbiology Reviews34 citationsDOI

Abstract

Clinical infection due to Candida species frequently involve growth in biofilm communities. Recalcitrance despite antifungal therapy leads to disease persistence associated with high morbidity and mortality. Candida possesses several tools allowing evasion of antifungal effects. Among these, protection of biofilm cells via encasement by the extracellular matrix is responsible for a majority drug resistance phenotype. The Candida matrix composition is complex and includes a mannan-glucan complex linked to antifungal drug sequestration. This mechanism of resistance is conserved across the Candida genus and impacts each of the available antifungal drug classes. The exosome pathway is responsible for delivery and assembly of much of the Candida extracellular matrix as functional vesicle protein and polysaccharide cargo. Investigations demonstrate the vesicle matrix delivery pathway is a useful fungal biofilm drug target. Further elucidation of the vesicle pathway, as well as understanding the roles of biofilm driven cargo may provide additional targets to aid the diagnosis, prevention, and treatment of Candida biofilms.

Topics & Concepts

BiofilmMicrobiologyBiologyAntifungal drugDrug resistanceExtracellular matrixCandida albicansAntifungalBacteriaCell biologyGeneticsAntifungal resistance and susceptibilityFungal Infections and StudiesBacterial Infections and Vaccines