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Article

Phenotypes Associated with Pathogenicity: Their Expression in Arctic Fungal Isolates

1
Department of Biology, Biotechnical Faculty, University of Ljubljana, Jamnikarjeva 101, SI-1000 Ljubljana, Slovenia
2
MicroArctic Research Group, Dr. Brill + Partner GmbH Institut für Hygiene und Mikrobiologie, Stiegstück 34, 22339 Hamburg, Germany
3
Institute of Microbiology and Immunology, Faculty of Medicine, University of Ljubljana, Zaloška 4, SI-1000 Ljubljana, Slovenia
4
Lars Bolund Institute of Regenerative Medicine, BGI-Qingdao, Qingdao 266555, China
*
Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Submission received: 24 October 2019 / Revised: 19 November 2019 / Accepted: 20 November 2019 / Published: 22 November 2019
(This article belongs to the Section Environmental Microbiology)

Abstract

:
Around 85% of the environments on Earth are permanently or seasonally colder than 5 °C. Among those, the poles constitute unique biomes, which harbor a broad variety of microbial life, including an abundance of fungi. Many fungi have an outstanding ability to withstand extreme conditions and play vital ecosystem roles of decomposers as well as obligate or facultative symbionts of many other organisms. Due to their dispersal capabilities, microorganisms from cryosphere samples can be distributed around the world. Such dispersal involves both species with undefined pathogenicity and potentially pathogenic strains. Here we describe the isolation of fungal species from pristine Arctic locations in Greenland and Svalbard and the testing of the expression of characteristics usually associated with pathogenic species, such as growth at 37 °C, hemolytic ability, and susceptibility to antifungal agents. A total of 320 fungal isolates were obtained, and 24 of the most abundant and representative species were further analyzed. Species known as emerging pathogens, like Aureobasidium melanogenum, Naganishia albida, and Rhodotorula mucilaginosa, were able to grow at 37 °C, showed beta-hemolytic activity, and were intrinsically resistant to commonly used antifungals such as azoles and echinocandins. Antifungal resistance screening revealed a low susceptibility to voriconazole in N. albida and Penicillium spp. and to fluconazole in Glaciozyma watsonii and Glaciozyma-related taxon.

1. Introduction

Despite appearing devoid of life, the poles are now recognized as biomes [1], and it has been repeatedly demonstrated that these unique environments are colonized by a wide variety of microbial life [2]. In addition to bacteria, a great diversity of psychrophilic, as well as psychrotolerant fungi inhabit the cryosphere, where they play important roles in the ecosystem [3]. For example, a strong association between the abundance and diversity of fungi and the blooming of algae on the dark surface ice of the Greenland Ice Sheet has been described [4]. Particularly common are species of the genera Penicillium, Thelebolus, Alternaria, Rhodotorula, Vishniacozyma, Aspergillus, and Cladosporium [3,4,5,6].
Due to their small size, microorganisms generally disperse over large distances, decreasing the impact of geographical barriers [7,8]. At least for some species, a constant exchange of populations between fairly remote habitats is possible [9]. For fungi, and in particular those inhabiting the poles, the main dispersal vector is the air [10]. Melting glaciers and, subsequently, ocean currents also contribute to the dispersal [11]. Biological particles and bioaerosols (bacterial and fungal) account for more than 20% of the total atmospheric particle content [12,13]. Moreover, microorganisms characteristic of temperate and warm climates, including some plant and animal pathogens, are abundantly present in the cryosphere, from where they can be transported and established ubiquitously around the world [12].
Fungi can efficiently adapt to new conditions and environments. High adaptability and stress tolerance often correlate with increased potential for causing opportunistic infections [14]. However, the pathogenicity potential of polar fungi is very poorly understood, although they might include potentially pathogenic strains [15]. Nutrient limitation, UV radiation, pH, osmotic and oxidative stresses are only some of the conditions that fungi must overcome to colonize and thrive in extreme Arctic environments. Such adaptations might increase their capacity to survive unexpected habitat shifts, including transitions into habitats associated with humans [16,17]. In fact, some polyextremotolerant fungi (as long as they can grow at elevated temperatures) have the potential to colonize complex organisms (plants or invertebrates) and even warm-blooded animals [14,18].
While fungal infections are on the rise, the treatment options remain limited and are being further decreased by the rise of antimicrobial resistance. Due to the limited number of physiological differences between animal and fungal cells (both being eukaryotes), few antifungal agents with low animal toxicity are currently available. Azoles act as inhibitors of ergosterol production and as such have very broad-spectrum activity and relatively low mammalian cell toxicity. They are the most common clinically used antifungal agents and can be classified, in terms of structure, into two categories: imidazoles and triazoles [19]. Among the imidazoles, only ketoconazole, one of the first developed azoles, has systemic activity. Because of its severe side effects and high gastric and hepatic toxicity, ketoconazole has been largely replaced by the first generation of triazoles for the treatment of systemic infections [19]. A representative of the triazole class is fluconazole, which is active against many species, except for opportunistic filamentous fungi, including Aspergillus, Fusarium, and Mucorales [20]. Because of its low toxicity, excellent pharmacological characteristics, and antiyeast activity, it has a very important role in the treatment of candidiasis and cryptococcosis [21,22]. Both imidazoles and the first generation of triazoles have a fungistatic nature. In order to overcome and widen the therapeutic spectrum with the antimold activity, a second generation of triazoles was developed. Second-generation triazoles, such as voriconazole, are considered fungicidal [23]. Echinocandins are the newest antifungal agents and the only ones that affect the fungal cell wall, acting as inhibitors of the β-(1,3)-d-glucan synthesis. All three echinocandins, caspofungin, anidulafungin, and micafungin, are lipopeptides derived from fungal natural products. Depending on the target microorganism and their concentration, echinocandins have both fungistatic (Aspergillus spp.—low concentrations) and fungicidal (Candida spp.—high concentrations) activity [20].
Antifungal resistance is the result of the natural selection of microorganisms with the ability to survive and thrive in the presence of drugs [20]. In contrast to the rapid emergence and spread of acquired resistance to antimicrobials that is characteristic of bacteria, fungi develop resistance slowly, gradually alternating physiological functions. Thus, the problem is not so much acquired resistance (as is the case with bacteria), but the emergence of new, opportunistic pathogens with intrinsic resistance to established antifungals [19,24]. Frequently encountered fungal pathogens such as Candida spp. and Aspergillus spp. have precisely defined clinical breakpoints (CBP) or epidemiological cutoff values (ECOFF) to help guide optimal antifungal therapy (European Committee on Antimicrobial Susceptibility Testing EUCAST, 2018). This is not the case for environmental strains and emerging pathogens, which hinders their investigation and complicates the interpretation of in vitro antifungal susceptibility testing (AFST).
While there has been considerable research about the fungal diversity of the Arctic environments [3,6,25], the potential pathogenicity of members of these fungal communities is still poorly understood [16,26]. As climate change is set to increase the incidence of diseases [27,28], Arctic fungal strains displaying phenotypes associated with pathogenicity should be investigated. Accordingly, in the present study we investigated fungal isolates from the Arctic region for three phenotypes commonly associated with pathogenicity in humans, i.e., growth at 37 °C, expression of hemolytic activity on bovine blood agar plates, and resistance to common antifungal therapeutics.

2. Materials and Methods

2.1. Site and Sample Description

Fieldwork campaigns were conducted in the summer seasons of the years 2016–2018, on the SW coast of Greenland (Greenland Ice Sheet - GrIS, and Russell Glacier) and Svalbard (Ny-Ålesund, Svalbard, Norway). Samples of snow, supraglacial ice and water, subglacial ice, glacial meltwater, and air were obtained from the locations described in Table 1. Supraglacial ice collected on the GrIS was divided based on the visible abundance of living dark glacier algae on its surface into dark ice samples (containing high biomass of glacier algae) and clear ice samples (without visible biomass of glacier algae). Subglacial ice samples were collected from three polythermal glaciers in Svalbard: Midtre Lovénbreen, Vestre Brøggerbreen, and Pedersenbreen. Samples were collected using sterilized tools and sterile nitrile gloves to avoid contamination, and organized into sterile Whirl-Pak® plastic bags or sterile plastic bottles. All the samples were processed within a few hours of their collection at the primary ice camp on the Greenland Ice Sheet and the NERC Arctic Research Station (Ny-Ålesund).

2.2. Fungal Cultivation and Isolation

The outer surface of subglacial and supraglacial ice was discarded after melting at room temperature. Snow and ice samples were then melted at 4 °C prior to analysis. All the samples were filtered through Milli-pore membrane filters (0.45 μm pore size) in triplicate, and filters were placed onto different media. Minimal medium (MM) and synthetic nutrient-poor agar (SNA) [29,30] were used to isolate oligotrophic fungi; dichloran rose bengal chloramphenicol agar (DRBC) [31] (Biolife, Milan, Italy) was used as a general-purpose medium; Reasoner’s 2A agar (R2A) [32] (Biolife) was used to isolate bacteria; dichloran 18% glycerol (DG18) medium [33] (Biolife, Milan, Italy) was used to obtain moderate xerophilic and xerotolerant species. To prevent bacterial growth, the media contained chloramphenicol (50 mg/L), except for R2A. Plates were incubated at 15 °C for up to two months in sterile plastic bags. All strains obtained were deposited in the Ex Culture Collection of the Infrastructural Centre Mycosmo (MRIC UL) at the Department of Biology, Biotechnical Faculty, University of Ljubljana, Slovenia.

2.3. Fungal Identification

Fungi were transferred onto fresh MEA (malt extract agar) or PDA (potato dextrose agar, Biolife) media for a week to obtain pure cultures. Filamentous fungi DNA was extracted following the protocol described in [4], while yeast DNA was extracted using the PrepMan Ultra reagent (Applied Biosystems, Foster City, CA, USA) according to the manufacturer instructions.
Amplification of the ITS region using the primers ITS5 and ITS4 [34] was performed for filamentous fungi, while amplification of the D1 and D2 domains of the LSU gene using NL1 and NL4 primers [35] was performed for yeasts as described in [6]. For isolates belonging to Penicillium and Cladosporium spp., additional marker genes were amplified, such as β-tubulin gene (benA) with Ben2f and Bt2b primers [36], and partial sequence of actin gene (act) with ACT-512F and ACT-783R primers [37], respectively. Subsequently, amplicons were Sanger-sequenced (Microsynth AG, Balgach, Switzerland) and the resulting sequences were aligned using MUSCLE software [38], implemented in the MEGA7 package [39] and compared against the GenBank database using the nBLAST platform. Sequences are available in the NCBI GenBank nucleotide database (Table 2).

2.4. Thermotolerance Assay

Fungal isolates were cultivated onto MEA and SDA (Sabouraud dextrose agar, Biolife, Milan, Italy) media and incubated at 37 °C for up to seven days to test their ability to grow at high temperatures.

2.5. Hemolytic Assay on Blood Agar

Fungal isolates were cultured on blood agar base (Honeywell Fluka, Charlotte, NC, USA) containing 5% of sterile bovine blood and incubated at both 15 °C and 37 °C for a week. Candida albicans (EXF-14635; ATTC90028) was used as a positive beta-hemolytic control [40,41]. An isolate was considered alpha-hemolytic when a green zone of discoloration was observed in the media, beta-hemolytic when a clear zone was observed denoting complete lysis of the erythrocytes of the blood agar plate, and gamma-hemolytic (not hemolytic) when there was no change noted in the media [42].

2.6. Antifungal Susceptibility Test (AFST)

Fungi were cultured at 15 °C for up to four days in SDA prior to the test. AFST was done using MIC-gradient strip method according to the manufacturer’s instructions (bioMérieux, Marcy-l’Étoile, France). Inoculum for the AFST was prepared by homogenizing well-isolated colonies/spores from the SDA plate in sterile 0.85% NaCl solution (with the addition of 0.05 g/L of Tween 20 for filamentous fungi) to obtain a turbidity equivalent to 0.5 McFarland standard, approximately corresponding to 1–5 × 108 CFU/mL. Suspensions were spread evenly over the entire surface of RPMI-1640 agar plates supplemented with 2.0% glucose (bioMérieux, Marcy-l’Étoile, France) using a sterile cotton swab. Etest gradient strips were then applied to the agar surface. Inverted plates sealed with parafilm were incubated in sterile plastic bags at 15 °C to allow the optimal growth of the Arctic strains. Fungal growth was checked after two and seven days. The antifungals tested belonged to two different antifungal classes: azoles and echinocandins. The azoles used were voriconazole (VO—range: 32–0.002 μg/mL), ketoconazole (KE—range: 32–0.002 μg/mL), and fluconazole (FL—range: 256–0.016 μg/mL). The echinocandins used were caspofungin (CS—range: 32–0.002 μg/mL), micafungin (MYC—range: 32–0.002 μg/mL), and anidulafungin (AND—range: 32–0.002 μg/mL). Given their intrinsic resistance to echinocandins [43], basidiomycetes were not tested for that antifungal class. The reference strain, Candida albicans ATCC® 90028™, was used as a control. MIC (minimum inhibitory concentration) values were determined and are reported in Table 3.

3. Results

3.1. Fungal Isolation and Identification

A total of 320 fungal isolates were obtained from the previously described samples after incubation [6]: 45.9% belonging to Basidiomycota (147/320), 53.8% to Ascomycota (172/320), and only 0.3% belonging to Mucoromycotina (1/320). In Greenland, dark ice was the environment with the most diverse mycobiome, hosting 23 different fungal genera and 28 species, followed by snow with 18 genera and 22 species. Unlike the other sampled environments, dark ice supported the presence of several genera that contain some common plant pathogen and endophyte species, such as Acrodontium, Epicoccum, Bjerkandera, and Microdochium nivale. In Svalbard, samples of subglacial ice collected from three different glaciers hosted, in total, 27 genera and more than 35 different species. The most commonly found species in different samples and environments were Cladosporium sp., Penicillium sp., Venturia sp., Glaciozyma-related taxon, Mrakia sp., Phenoliferia sp., and Rhodotorula svalbardensis pro. tem. The most commonly found and most abundant species in the different environments were selected for further tests (Table 4).

3.2. Thermotolerance

Isolates with detectable growth at 37 °C on MEA and SDA were Penicillium chrysogenum (EXF-12443), Naganishia albida (EXF-12581), Rhodotorula mucilaginosa (EXF-13607), and Aureobasidium melanogenum (EXF-13647). All the other strains tested were not able to grow at such a temperature.

3.3. Hemolytic Assay on Blood Agar

Results of the hemolytic assay on bovine blood agar are listed in Table 3. The tested fungal species showed both alpha- and beta-hemolytic phenotypes. More than half of the species (13/25) were not hemolytic at 15 °C. Aureobasidium pullulans and A. melanogenum were the only isolates that presented a clear and strong beta-hemolytic reaction at 15 °C (Figure 1), whereas the remaining strains (eight out of 25), such as Preussia sp., Ph. psychrophenolica, Neocucurbitaria sp., and Oleoguttula mirabilis displayed alpha-hemolysis. Penicillium bialowiezense-like had zones of both alpha- and beta-hemolysis (Figure 1), while P. chrysogenum showed only a (weak) alpha-hemolytic reaction. Pseudogymnoascus sp. presented a brownish discoloration of the agar not attributable to any of the known hemolytic reactions. Rhodotorula mucilaginosa was the only isolate with a beta-hemolytic reaction at 37 °C. No strains were alpha-hemolytic at this temperature.

3.4. Antifungal Susceptibility Test (AFST)

Antifungal susceptibility was evaluated in all the selected species and results of the test are reported in Table 3.

3.4.1. Azoles

Most of the tested strains expressed relatively low susceptibility to fluconazole, with MIC50 = 64 μg/mL (concentration inhibiting the growth of half of the tested strains). Fluconazole proved to be most active against Phenoliferia spp., with MIC ≤ 0.047 μg/mL. Filamentous fungi, namely Articulospora sp., Cladosporium sp., Comoclathris sp., Neocucurbitaria sp., Penicillium bialowiezense-like, P. chrysogenum, P. crustosum, Preussia sp., Venturia sp., and Pseudogymnoascus sp., and yeasts, namely Glaciozyma spp., showed high MICs for fluconazole ranging from 0.25 to 265 μg/mL, appearing resistant in vitro. The filamentous Pseudogymnoascus sp. had the lowest MIC value (8 μg/mL) compared to the other filamentous fungi. Voriconazole, on the other hand, showed better activity against the tested isolates with MIC50 = 0.032 μg/mL. It was most active against Articulospora sp., Dothiora sp., Neocucurbitaria sp., Glaciozyma spp., and Phenoliferia sp. with MICs ≤ 0.004 μg/mL. The lowest activity was observed in the case of Naganishia albida with MIC = 2 μg/mL. In general, ketoconazole showed similar antifungal activity to voriconazole, with MIC50 = 0.032 μg/mL. The lowest ketoconazole activity was observed among Penicillium spp., with MICs ranging from 0.38 μg/mL to 12 μg/mL.

3.4.2. Echinocandins

In general, micafungin and anidulafungin showed comparable antifungal activity, with MIC50 = 0.008 μg/mL for both substances. Micafungin and anidulafungin both proved most active against Cladosporium sp., Dothiora sp., Neocucurbitaria sp., and Penicillium spp., with MICs ≤ 0.008 μg/mL. In general, caspofungin had a lower antifungal activity compared to micafungin and anidulafungin, with MIC50 = 0.125 μg/mL.

4. Discussion

Arctic fungi are extremophiles able to withstand environmental conditions that are too harsh for most other organisms. Their great adaptability and stress tolerance, together with the ability of yeasts and fungal spores to spread in the atmosphere and water, and the selective pressure induced by global environmental changes, may be increasing the risks they present as emerging fungal pathogens. Exoenzyme production, resistance to antifungals, and the ability to adapt to host body temperature are some of the virulence-associated characteristics shared by pathogenic fungi [19,44,45,46]. At least one of the abovementioned virulence-associated phenotypes was expressed by several of our Arctic isolates.
Thermotolerance is a crucial virulence factor for establishing the invasive type of infection in humans and is also the trait lacking in most fungi. Typically, psychrotolerant strains able to survive at higher temperature might bear a significant pathogenic potential [15]. All the selected fungal species were isolated at an incubation temperature of 15 °C, showing a psychrotolerant or psychrophilic nature. Growth tests at higher temperature (37 °C) revealed the abilities of certain strains to adapt and grow in broad temperature ranges. Naganishia albida, Rhodotorula mucilaginosa, and Aureobasidium melanogenum are known polyextremotolerant and emerging pathogenic species with clinical relevance, and together with Penicillium chrysogenum showed their ability to grow at 37 °C despite their isolation from a very cold habitat.
The first screening of hemolytic phenotypes on blood agar in environmental Arctic fungi reported here revealed that Aureobasidium pullulans, A. melanogenum (at 15 °C) and Rhodotorula mucilaginosa (at 37 °C) had the strongest beta-hemolytic reaction, an ability already reported in strains of these fungi isolated from hypersaline water and subglacial ice [47]. Also, penicillia (Penicillium bialowiezense-like and P. chrysogenum) exhibited some degree of hemolysis, in agreement with other studies on airborne fungi [48,49]. P. chrysogenum strains from indoor air were found to produce chrysolysin, a proteinaceous hemolysin, only when incubated at 37 °C [50]. The same hemolysin was not always expressed in outdoor air strains of the same species or at lower temperatures [51]. Based on our results, no reaction was observed in P. crustosum, suggesting that hemolytic abilities are species- or even strain-specific. The latter statement is supported by the authors of [49], who studied airbone fungi in a Russian Arctic settlement and found that Penicillium aurantiogriseum, but not P. canescens and P. simplicissimum, showed strong hemolytic activity. Rhodotorula mucilaginosa was the only isolate with a strong beta-hemolytic activity at 37 °C, and a weaker activity at 15 °C, again highlighting the importance of temperature as a triggering factor of virulence-associated traits [50]. Pseudogymnoascus spp. are known to have many extracellular enzymes that can cause blood cells lysis [51]. Neocucurbitaria sp., Preussia sp., Phenoliferia psychrophenolica, and Oleoguttula sp. showed some degree of hemolysis. The knowledge of hemolysis in fungal species is extremely limited compared to bacteria. Fungal hemolysins are pore-forming exotoxins capable of lysis of red blood cells and nucleated cells [52]. Little is known about their role and mechanisms of action, but research highlighted that many well-known pathogenic fungi, such as Aspergillus flavus and A. fumigatus, as well as Candida albicans and Cryptococcus neoformans, produce several cytolysins [52]. The expression of fungal hemolysins has been proposed as a virulence factor and as a survival strategy for opportunistic fungi [53,54,55]. The iron released by the lysis of red blood cells is an essential factor in fungal growth [56]; it can facilitate hyphal infection [53] and favors the transition from fungi with a commensal lifestyle to invasive pathogens [57]. However, while fungal hemolysin expression can provide an opportunity for colonization and infection, research suggests that the compounds might have functional roles unrelated to pathogenesis, such as hyphal aggregation for fruiting body formation [58,59] and regulation of fungal growth [52]. Moreover, their functional role as a competitor in specific ecological niches [60] and plant pathogenesis has also been proposed [61]. Due to the limited nutrient sources in the Arctic, hemolysins could also provide an ecological advantage to fungi, which are well-known decomposers, and help with obtaining limiting nutrients by disrupting the membranes of other microorganisms and thus accessing their intracellular content.
Naganishia albida, formerly Cryptococcus albidus, is, together with Papiliotrema laurentii, formerly Cryptococcus laurentii, responsible for about 80% of non-neoformans cryptococcal infections [62,63]. Despite the lack of validated standard antifungal treatment protocols for non-neoformans cryptococcosis, the literature supports the use of fluconazole for consolidation and maintenance therapy [22]. Our results showed that fluconazole and voriconazole were only weakly active against N. albida EXF-12581 in vitro (MIC = 64 μg/mL and MIC = 2 μg/mL, respectively). Ketoconazole was the only azole that showed higher in vitro susceptibility (MIC = 0.047 μg/mL). This yeast is, like all Cryptococcus-like fungi, intrinsically resistant to the echinocandin class.
Filobasidium magnum, formerly Cryptococcus magnus, has rarely been isolated from mammals, with only four case reports [64,65,66]. Compared to other AFST data, it is in vitro susceptible to voriconazole with an at least two 2-fold dilution steps lower MIC [46]. According to other studies on environmental isolates [67,68], Naganishia albida and Filobasidium magnum are known to be fluconazole-resistant.
Among the isolates that were able to grow at 37 °C was Rhodotorula mucilaginosa, a basidiomycetous yeast that emerged as an opportunistic pathogen infecting different body sites of patients with immune system deficiencies in the last few decades [69]. R. mucilaginosa is intrinsically resistant to echinocandins and fluconazole [70,71], as was shown with our isolate EXF-13607, exhibiting high MICs for fluconazole, caspofungin, anidulafungin, and micafungin (256 μg/mL, 32 μg/mL, 32 μg/mL, and 32 μg/mL, respectively). MICs for voriconazole are strain-dependent and usually range between 0.25 μg/mL and 32 μg/mL, with MIC50 = 2 μg/mL [69,71]. Considering this, isolate R. mucilaginosa EXF-13607 was in vitro susceptible to voriconazole with MIC = 0.032 μg/mL.
The strains Aureobasidium pullulans EXF-12432 and Aureobasidium melanogenum EXF-13647 were also able to grow at 37 °C. These dematiaceous yeasts, of vast biotechnological importance, were implicated in opportunistic infections in the past [60,72], although later publications suggested that they likely belong to the recently described A. melanogenum, which was previously known as A. pullulans var. melanogenum [73]. Both isolates, EXF-12432 and EXF-13647, showed resistance patterns typical for A. pullulans: high fluconazole MICs (MICEXF-12432 = 48 μg/mL and MICEXF-13647 = 16 μg/mL) indicating resistance [74,75].
To the best of our knowledge, apart from Aureobasidium spp., F. magnum, N. albida, and Rhodotorula spp., there are no reports on the genera Articulospora, Comoclathris, Dothiora, Neocucurbitaria, Oleoguttula, Preussia, Pseudogymnoascus, Venturia, Glaciozyma, Mrakia, Phenoliferia, and Vishniacozyma being implicated in human infections. Nevertheless, the elevated MICs of Glaciozyma watsonii and the Glaciozyma-related taxon towards fluconazole (MIC = 256 μg/mL and MIC = 0.25 μg/mL) are noteworthy.
Penicillium spp. and Cladosporium spp. have their place in clinical mycology and are occasionally reported as agents of infection in immunocompromised patients [76,77]. Like all filamentous fungi, Penicillium spp. and Cladosporium spp. are resistant to fluconazole [20], with MICs ranging from 16 to 256 μg/mL for our isolates. All three Penicillium species tested revealed high in vitro MICs for voriconazole (up to 1.5 μg/mL) and ketoconazole (up to 12 μg/mL). Clinical cases of invasive mycosis caused by voriconazole-resistant Penicillium species previously not recognized as primary pathogens have been reported [77]. This is particularly worrying since voriconazole is the first-line therapy for invasive mold infections. Resistance mechanisms responsible for acquired azole resistance in filamentous fungi include point mutations of the drug target gene, overexpression of the target gene and of genes encoding efflux pump proteins, and the formation of biofilm [78]. Those mechanisms have already been observed in Penicillium digitatum and are related to the massive use of fungicides in agriculture [78]. Whether the high voriconazole MIC observed in Arctic penicillia is a consequence of acquired resistance and an indication of the dispersion of resistant species from temperate areas to the Arctic or even of evolution of resistant strains in the Arctic is an intriguing question for future studies.
In general, compared to other echinocandins, caspofungin exhibited higher MICs for all tested isolates: four 2-step dilutions higher MIC50 than those of anidulafungin and micafungin (0.125 μg/mL for caspofungin versus 0.008 μg/mL for anidulafungin and micafungin). MIC50 is usually a species- or strain-specific value and is used here only to facilitate comparisons among different antifungal classes. Such discrepancies are typical of echinocandins. Caspofungin susceptibility is known to show inter- and intra-laboratory variability and should be interpreted in the context of susceptibility to the other two echinocandins [79].

5. Conclusions

This study was the first effort to explore potentially pathogenic phenotypes of environmental Arctic fungi. To the best of our knowledge, this includes the first screening for hemolytic ability of Arctic environmental fungal species on blood agar, identifying several species with marked alpha- or beta-hemolytic activity, with one expressing the phenotype at 37 °C and several others able to grow at this temperature despite their polar origins. This is also the first assessment of antifungal susceptibility in Arctic fungi isolated from environments considered to be pristine. We report unexpectedly low susceptibilities for voriconazole in N. albida and Penicillium spp. and for fluconazole in Glaciozyma watsonii and the Glaciozyma-related taxon, which should be investigated further to explore their potential clinical implications. The present study contributes to a better understanding of microbiological intrinsic resistance, the development of acquired resistance in environmental isolates, and, most importantly, the emergence of intrinsically resistant species as opportunistic pathogens.
Our research stresses the importance of the identification of virulence-associated phenotypes in Arctic fungi, especially in the context of the increased release of these fungi into the surroundings due to climate change and the recent increment of opportunistic mycoses. The potential hazards these fungi may represent for human and animal health warrant further investigation.

Author Contributions

Conceptualization, L.P., C.G. and N.G.-C.; Formal analysis, L.P. and R.T.; Methodology, L.P., D.C.M. and R.T.; Supervision, C.G., F.H.H.B. and N.G.-C.; Validation, L.P. and R.T.; Writing—original draft, L.P.; Writing—review and editing, D.C.M., R.T., C.G., F.H.H.B. and N.G.-C.

Funding

This work has received funding from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under the Marie Skłodowska-Curie Grant Agreement ‘Microarctic’ No. 675546. The authors acknowledge the financial support from the Slovenian Research Agency to the Infrastructural Centre Mycosmo (MRIC UL) and to the programs P1-0170 and P1-0198.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflicts of interest. F.H.H.B. is the managing director of Dr. Brill + Partner GmbH. D.C.M. was employed by Dr. Brill + Partner GmbH as part of a research network (the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme, Marie Skłodowska-Curie grant agreement No 675546) and declares no conflict of interest.

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Figure 1. Beta-hemolytic phenotypes of the strains (A) Aureobasidium melanogenum (EXF-13647), (B) Aureobasidium pullulans (EXF-12432), and (C) Penicillium bialowiezense-like (EXF-11445) expressed at 15 °C.
Figure 1. Beta-hemolytic phenotypes of the strains (A) Aureobasidium melanogenum (EXF-13647), (B) Aureobasidium pullulans (EXF-12432), and (C) Penicillium bialowiezense-like (EXF-11445) expressed at 15 °C.
Microorganisms 07 00600 g001
Table 1. Sampling area and year, sample types, and GPS coordinates of the sampling locations.
Table 1. Sampling area and year, sample types, and GPS coordinates of the sampling locations.
Sampling AreaSampling LocationSample TypeSampling YearGPS Coordinates
Kangerlussuaq, GreenlandGreenland Ice SheetSnow2016/201767°04′43″ N 49°20′29″ W
Dark ice
Clear ice
Supraglacial water
Russell GlacierAir201867°05′45″ N 50°13′00″ W
Ny-Ålesund, SvalbardMidtre LovénbreenSubglacial ice201778°53′37″ N 12°04′13″ E
Glacial meltwater78°53′25″ N 12°03′15″ E
Vestre BrøggerbreenSubglacial ice78°54′55″ N 11°45′48″ E
PedersenbreenSubglacial ice78°52′46″ N 12°17′57″ E
Table 2. List of the selected fungal species used in this study, EXF collection number, sample type, sampling location and year, isolation media, and GenBank reference of the deposited sequence used for identification.
Table 2. List of the selected fungal species used in this study, EXF collection number, sample type, sampling location and year, isolation media, and GenBank reference of the deposited sequence used for identification.
Isolate (EXF-)SpeciesPhylumSampleSample LocationSampling YearIsolation Media *GenBank Accession Number
11445Penicillium bialowiezense-likeAscomycotaDark iceGreenland Ice Sheet2016DG18MN356456
12407Vishniacozyma victoriaeBasidiomycotaDark iceGreenland Ice Sheet2017R2AMK454786
12427Cladosporium sp.AscomycotaDark iceGreenland Ice Sheet2017DG18MK460331
12432Aureobasidium pullulansAscomycotaSnowGreenland Ice Sheet2017SNAMK460317
12443Penicillium chrysogenumAscomycotaSnowGreenland Ice Sheet2017R2AMK460375
12448Preussia sp.AscomycotaSnowGreenland Ice Sheet2017R2AMK460381
12518Mrakia sp.BasidiomycotaDark iceGreenland Ice Sheet2017R2AMK454832
12523Phenoliferia glacialisBasidiomycotaSupraglacial waterGreenland Ice Sheet2017R2AMK454852
12580Filobasidium magnumBasidiomycotaSubglacial iceSvalbard—Midre Lovenbreen2017DRBCMK670462
12581Naganishia albidaBasidiomycotaSubglacial iceSvalbard—Midre Lovenbreen2017MMMK670463
12591Glaciozyma watsoniiBasidiomycotaSubglacial iceSvalbard—Vestre Broggerbreen2017SNAMK670501
12629Penicillium crustosumAscomycotaSubglacial iceSvalbard—Pedersenbreen2017MMMK671620
12639Pseudogymnoascus sp.AscomycotaSubglacial iceSvalbard—Vestre Broggerbreen2017SNAMK671632
12718Rhodotorula svalbardensis pro. tem.BasidiomycotaClear iceGreenland Ice Sheet2017DRBCMK460392
12875Comoclathris sp.AscomycotaSnowGreenland Ice Sheet2017R2AMK460354
12951Phenoliferia psychrophenolicaBasidiomycotaSubglacial iceSvalbard—Midre Lovenbreen2017DG18MK670452
12990Venturia sp.AscomycotaSubglacial iceSvalbard—Pedersenbreen2017R2AMK671645
13072Articulospora sp.AscomycotaDark iceGreenland Ice Sheet2016DG18MN356457
13083Oleoguttula mirabilisAscomycotaClear iceGreenland Ice Sheet2017R2AMK454839
13100Neocucurbitaria sp.AscomycotaSnowGreenland Ice Sheet2017SNAMK460385
13102Glaciozyma-related taxonBasidiomycotaGlacial meltwaterSvalbard—Midre Lovenbreen2017MMMK670451
13131Dothiora sp.AscomycotaSnowGreenland Ice Sheet2017MMMK460359
13607Rhodotorula mucilaginosaBasidiomycotaAirGreenland—Russell glacier2018DG18MN356458
13647Aureobasidium melanogenumAscomycotaAirGreenland—Russell glacier2018DG18MN356459
* Media acronyms stand for: DG18: dichloran 18% glycerol, DRBC: dichloran rose bengal chloramphenicol, MM: minimal medium, SNA: synthetic nutrient-poor agar.
Table 3. Etest MIC (minimum inhibitory concentration) results for the fungal species tested. MIC values are reported in μg/mL. FL: Fluconazole; CS: Caspofungin; VO: Voriconazole; MYC: Micafungin; KE: Ketoconazole; AND: Anidulafungin. NG: no growth; NT: not tested (assumed to be intrinsically resistant).
Table 3. Etest MIC (minimum inhibitory concentration) results for the fungal species tested. MIC values are reported in μg/mL. FL: Fluconazole; CS: Caspofungin; VO: Voriconazole; MYC: Micafungin; KE: Ketoconazole; AND: Anidulafungin. NG: no growth; NT: not tested (assumed to be intrinsically resistant).
EXF-SpeciesPhylumMIC (μg/mL)
FLCSVOMYCKEAND
13072Articulospora sp.Ascomycota2560.0320.0040.0120.0020.023
13647Aureobasidium melanogenumAscomycota160.250.380.250.50.125
12432Aureobasidium pullulansAscomycota480.380.0940.0940.190.38
14635 CTRLCandida albicansAscomycota0.0320.064≤0.0020.016≤0.0020.008
12427Cladosporium sp.Ascomycota1620.0230.0080.0060.004
12875Comoclathris sp.Ascomycota2560.1250.380.0640.50.006
13131Dothiora sp.Ascomycota0.380.0640.0030.0060.0030.002
13100Neocucurbitaria sp.Ascomycota256320.0020.0060.0040.002
13083Oleoguttula mirabilisAscomycota2560.0020.0020.0020.0020.002
11445Penicillium bialowiezense-likeAscomycota2560.0161.50.0020.380.002
12443Penicillium chrysogenumAscomycota2560.0160.50.00220.002
12629Penicillium crustosumAscomycota2560.50.250.008120.008
12448Preussia sp.Ascomycota2560.1250.190.0040.0320.016
12639Pseudogymnoascus sp.Ascomycota810.0940.1250.380.25
12990Venturia sp.Ascomycota640.0020.0160.1250.0320.032
12580Filobasidium magnumBasidiomycota4NT0.032NT0.023NT
13102Glaciozyma-related taxonBasidiomycota0.25NT0.002NT0.002NT
12591Glaciozyma watsoniiBasidiomycota256NT0.002NT0.002NT
12518Mrakia sp.BasidiomycotaNGNGNGNGNGNG
12581Naganishia albidaBasidiomycota64NT2NT0.047NT
12523Phenoliferia glacialisBasidiomycota0.016NT0.002NT0.004NT
12951Phenoliferia psychrophenolicaBasidiomycota0.047R0.002R0.002R
12718Rhodotorula svalbardensis pro. tem.BasidiomycotaNGNGNGNGNGNG
13607Rhodotorula mucilaginosaBasidiomycota256320.032320.03232
12407Vishniacozyma victoriaeBasidiomycota1NT0.016NT0.032NT
Range0.016–2560.002–320.002–20.002–320.002–120.002–32
Geometric mean MIC114.80.2630.6724.572.242.35
MIC50640.0320.0320.1250.0080.008
MIC902560.50.5320.250.5
Table 4. Hemolytic phenotypes of the fungal species tested.
Table 4. Hemolytic phenotypes of the fungal species tested.
EXF-SpeciesPhylumHemolysis in Bovine Blood
15 °C37 °C
11445Penicillium bialowiezense-likeAscomycotaα/β −NG
12407Vishniacozyma victoriaeBasidiomycotaγNG
12427Cladosporium sp.AscomycotaγNG
12432Aureobasidium pullulansAscomycotaβNG
12443Penicillium chrysogenumAscomycotaα −γ − (little growth)
12448Preussia sp.AscomycotaαNG
12518Mrakia sp.BasidiomycotaγNG
12523Phenoliferia glacialisBasidiomycotaγNG
12580Filobasidium magnumBasidiomycotaγNG
12581Naganishia albidaBasidiomycotaγγ − (little growth)
12591Glaciozyma watsoniiBasidiomycotaγNG
12629Penicillium crustosumAscomycotaγNG
12639Pseudogymnoascus sp.Ascomycotaα *NG
12718Rhodotorula svalbardensis pro. tem.BasidiomycotaNGNG
12875Comoclathris sp.AscomycotaγNG
12951Phenoliferia psychrophenolicaBasidiomycotaα −NG
12990Venturia sp.AscomycotaγNG
13072Articulospora sp.AscomycotaγNG
13083Oleoguttula mirabilisAscomycotaαNG
13100Neocucurbitaria sp.Ascomycotaα -NG
13102Glaciozyma-related taxonBasidiomycotaγNG
13131Dothiora sp.AscomycotaγNG
13607Rhodotorula mucilaginosaBasidiomycotaα -β
13647Aureobasidium melanogenumAscomycotaβγ − (little growth)
14635 CTRLCandida albicansAscomycotaγβ
α: alpha-hemolytic, β: beta-hemolytic, γ: gamma-hemolytic, + signifies a stronger phenotype, − signifies a weaker phenotype, NG: no growth. * α-hemolysis is noted for this isolate even though the phenotype does not correspond to the exact description of an α-hemolytic organism.

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MDPI and ACS Style

Perini, L.; Mogrovejo, D.C.; Tomazin, R.; Gostinčar, C.; Brill, F.H.H.; Gunde-Cimerman, N. Phenotypes Associated with Pathogenicity: Their Expression in Arctic Fungal Isolates. Microorganisms 2019, 7, 600. https://0-doi-org.brum.beds.ac.uk/10.3390/microorganisms7120600

AMA Style

Perini L, Mogrovejo DC, Tomazin R, Gostinčar C, Brill FHH, Gunde-Cimerman N. Phenotypes Associated with Pathogenicity: Their Expression in Arctic Fungal Isolates. Microorganisms. 2019; 7(12):600. https://0-doi-org.brum.beds.ac.uk/10.3390/microorganisms7120600

Chicago/Turabian Style

Perini, Laura, Diana C. Mogrovejo, Rok Tomazin, Cene Gostinčar, Florian H. H. Brill, and Nina Gunde-Cimerman. 2019. "Phenotypes Associated with Pathogenicity: Their Expression in Arctic Fungal Isolates" Microorganisms 7, no. 12: 600. https://0-doi-org.brum.beds.ac.uk/10.3390/microorganisms7120600

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