In previous studies on the colony phenotype switching of Saccharomyces cerevisiae, we observed that the least virulent isolates formed greater numbers of petite colonies when grown at body temperature, 37°C. To determine if there is a link between virulence and petite formation, we examined the frequency of spontaneous petite formation for virulent clinical isolates (YJM128, YJM309), an intermediate virulent segregant of YJM128 (YJM145) and avirulent clinical (YJM308) and nonclinical S. cerevisiae (Y55, YJM237) after growth at 37°C. The rank order of increasing frequency of petite formation was YJM128 = YJM145 < YJM309 < Y55 < 0.001). Overall, petites were significantly less virulent than the parental strains. However, death of some DBA/2N mice caused by YJM128 petite 1 showed that petites are not totally avirulent. To see if S. cerevisiae isolates form petite colonies in vivo, both mouse models were infected with parental grands of YJM128 and Y55. Recovered colonies were counted and confirmed as grand or petite, and the frequency of petite colonies in the brain, the target organ, correlated with the in vitro results. Overall, these studies show an inverse correlation between the frequency of petite-colony formation and the previously determined virulence of S. cerevisiae in CD-1 mice. Furthermore, petites were significantly less virulent than the parental grands, in most cases, and petites are spontaneously formed in vivo at a frequency inversely correlated to the virulence of the strain.
CITATION STYLE
Weger, S. D., Ganji, A., Clemons, K. V., Byron, J. K., Minn, Y., & Stevens, D. A. (2002). Correlation of the frequency of petite formation by isolates of Saccharomyces cerevisiea with virulence. Medical Mycology, 40(2), 161–168. https://doi.org/10.1080/mmy.40.2.161.168
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