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Original

Dormancy of Candida albicans cells in the presence of the polyene antibiotic amphotericin B: simple demonstration by flow cytometry

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Pages 525-533 | Received 04 Dec 2006, Published online: 09 Jul 2009
 

Abstract

Flow cytometry light scattering was used to monitor size increase of Candida albicans (isolate ATCC 10231) cells in the presence or absence of the antifungal drug amphotericin B (AmB). This non-invasive and descriptive method allowed for the differentiation of dead and dormant sub-populations of cells. When inoculated into a growth medium without AmB, a progressive increase in light scattering was observed over a period of approximately 4 h, but without proliferation of the yeast. After this period, the light scattering distribution regressed to baseline level, whereas cell proliferation started. In the presence of AmB, all the cells shrank in size within approximately 4 h and proliferation was temporarily halted. However, in the presence of 0.4 µM AmB, a progressive increase of light scattering occurred after 21 h which was similar to that observed within the first 4 h in the absence of the antifungal. After approximately 24 h of incubation at this concentration of AmB, proliferation resumed.

These observations indicate that this renewed cell proliferation was due to the reawakening of dormant cells in the presence of AmB (45% in the presence of 0.4µM AmB) rather than the result of the development of viable cells that had escaped detection. This simple descriptive approach could be extended to other fungal strains or species, to other antifungal drugs and possibly to bacteria.

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