Isolation and molecular characterization of clinical and environmental dematiaceous fungi and relatives from Iran

Document Type : Original Articles

Authors

1 Department of Medical Parasitology and Mycology, School of Medicine, Jahrom University of Medical Sciences, Jahrom, Iran

2 Mazandaran university of medical sciences

3 University of Medical Sciences, Bushehr, Iran

4 General Medical Education and Research Center, Teikyo University, Tokyo, Japan

5 Cellular and Molecular Research Center, Yasuj University of Medical Sciences, Yasuj, Iran

6 Department of Environmental Health Engineering, School of Public Health, Isfahan University of Medical Sciences, Isfahan, Iran

7 5) Department of Medical Mycology and Parasitology, School of Public Health, Tehran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran

8 National Institute of Health Research Isfahan Health Research Station, Tehran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran

9 Department of Parasitology and Mycology, School of Medicine, Isfahan University of Medical Sciences, Isfahan, Iran.

10 Department of Medical Parasitology & Mycology, School of Medicine, Isfahan University of Medical Sciences, Isfahan, Iran

11 Laboratory of Space and Environmental Medicine, Graduate School of Medicine, Teikyo University, Tokyo, Japan. 5 General Medical Education and Research Center, Teikyo University, Tokyo, Japan

10.18502/cmm.7.3.7798

Abstract

Background and Purpose: The frequency and genetic diversity of black fungi in environmental and clinical settings have not been fully studied in Iran. This study aimed to identify and evaluate intra- and inter-species DNA sequence variation and also understand the phylogenetic relationships of melanized fungi and relatives isolated from different geographical regions of Iran.
Materials and Methods: In total, 111 clinical and environmental strains of dematiaceous fungi were isolated, and their internal transcribed spacer ribosomal DNA(rDNA) regions were sequenced and analyzed.
Results: An inter-species nucleotide sequence diversity rate of 1 to 464 nucleotides was observed between the species. Intra-species differences were found in the strains of Alternaria alternata, Cladosporium cladosporioides, Alternaria tenuissima, Curvularia spicifera, Aureobasidium pullulans, Curvularia hawaiiensis, Neoscytalidium dimidiatum,
Alternaria terricola, Alternaria chlamydospora, Didymella glomerata, and Drechslera dematioidea by 0–59, 0–22, 0–4, 0–4, 0–3, 0–2, 0–2, 0–2, 0–2, 0–1, and 0–1 nt, respectively.
Conclusion: The internal transcribed spacer rDNA is useful for the discrimination of several taxa of dematiaceous fungi. However, a better understanding of the taxonomy of species of Alternaria requires a larger rDNA region or a library of other gene sequences.
 

Keywords


Introduction

Dematiaceous fungi are characterized by the presence of pale brown-to-dark melanin-like pigments in the cell wall, which are linked to the pathogenicity of these fungi [ 1 , 2 ]. They comprise a large number of filamentous, yeasts, and yeast-like fungi and relatives, which are found in soil, air, wood, plant, and organic debris [ 3 ]. Numerous species in this group are known to cause cutaneous lesions and severe brain encephalitis. Besides, under suitable conditions, they may produce toxins that can pose serious health risks to humans and animals [ 1 , 4 , 5 ]. Moreover, some of these fungi are of industrial importance and may be used in the production of cellobiose dehydrogenase, citric acid, and pullulan [ 6 ].

Despite the increasing importance of dematiaceous fungal infections, little is known about their epidemiology, mode of transmission, or pathogenesis. Epidemiological studies of dematiaceous fungi provide awareness and accurate information on their prevalence. Furthermore, such studies help develop control strategies regarding infections caused by these fungi and improve the diagnosis and development of treatment options [ 7 ]. Correct identification to the species level is essential for epidemiological, pathological, toxicological, and industrial purposes, as well as for targeted antifungal therapy [ 7 , 8 ].

For ages, phenotypic methods, including biochemistry, morphology, and physiology have formed the backbone of the identification and taxonomy of dematiaceous fungi [ 9 , 10 ]. Due to the diversities and similarities among different species, morphological features may often be indistinct and inadequate for species identification [ 10 , 11 ]. For accurate identification of these fungi, the focus has shifted towards molecular strategies with the advantages of limited hands-on activity, less required experience, and increased reliability and reproducibility compared with conventional diagnosis [ 12 ].

Usage of molecular methods to provide precise and timely information for health professionals is clearly advantageous. Molecular methods, in conjunction with conventional methods or alone, have great potential to develop the analysis of dematiaceous fungi [ 13 ]. Nevertheless, various factors, such as nonspecific genetic amplification from other sources (the environment or the host gene), samples containing a mixed infection, an incomplete database particularly related to GenBank, are the limitations to well describe the epidemiology by molecular methods [ 14 ].

Different DNA-based techniques have been used for the identification of black fungi, including polymerase chain reaction (PCR)-restriction fragments length polymorphism, amplified fragment length polymorphism, real-time PCR, arbitrarily primed PCR, rolling circle amplification, and sequence analysis of different regions of the DNA [ 15 - 20 ]. Partial small subunit (SSU), D1/D2 domain of the large subunit, and internal transcribed spacer (ITS) of the ribosomal DNA, chitin synthase (CHS) gene, and mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) are examples of target DNAs for sequence-based identification [ 8 , 21 - 23 ].

The DI/D2 domain is not a useful marker for the identification of some species that have identical sequences or an intra-species variation of less than 0.5% [ 8 ]. Likewise, sequence data of mtDNA and CHS are not available for all species in GenBank, and partial SSU sequences with little nucleotide variation make the SSU rRNA gene a relatively poor target for discrimination of these fungi [ 22 ]. In contrast, phylogenetic analysis and identification of black fungi and relatives based on sequencing of the ITS1 and ITS2 regions has shown to be useful and remains the gold standard target [ 22 ].

No study has been performed in Iran about the occurrence and distribution of black fungi in clinical and environmental settings. Therefore, the present research project aimed to identify and evaluate inter- and intra-species variation within, and also understand phylogenetic relationships of dematiaceous fungi isolated from different geographical parts of Iran. The preliminary data provided in this study could also be useful for improving the differentiation and diagnostic detection of black fungi in the epidemiological, clinical, environmental, and industrial settings.

Materials and Methods

Samples and fungi isolation

In total, 350 samples, including soil, plant, wood, organic debris, and air were randomly collected from different parts of the center, south, and southwest of Iran, i.e., Shiraz, Bushehr, Isfahan, Ahwaz, and Yasuj cities. This study was approved by the Ethics Committee of Tehran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran.

Approximately 20 g of each sample (except for air samples) was suspended in 100 mL sterile saline containing 200 U penicillin, 200 μg/ml streptomycin, and 200 μg/ml chloramphenicol. After initial incubation at room temperature for 30 min, 20 mL of sterile mineral oil was added to the solution, followed by vigorous shaking for 5 min. The samples were left for 20 min to let the debris settle down, and the oil-water interphase was carefully collected, inoculated onto the Sabouraud dextrose agar supplemented with 50 mg/L of chloramphenicol (Merck, Germany), Mycobiotic agar (Merck, Germany), home-made potato dextrose agar, and malt extract agar (MEA; Merck, Germany). Afterward, it was incubated for up to four weeks at 28 °C in darkness. The colonies of dematiaceous fungi were then isolated and stored on MEA prior to use [ 24 ].

In addition, samples were obtained from bathrooms and washing machines by using sterile cotton swabs moistened with physiological saline which were transported in tubes and inoculated onto MEA agar [ 25 ]. Air sampling was performed by the settled plate method using Sabouraud dextrose agar containing chloramphenicol (100 mg/L), gentamicin (40 mg/L), homemade potato dextrose agar, and MEA [ 26 ]. Plates were located for 30 min at different heights on the ground. All plates were incubated at 28 °C for at least 4 weeks until the appearance of slow-growing dark colonies [ 27 ].

A variety of clinical specimens, including nail, mouth, and sinus samples were collected from patients suspected of fungal infections and submitted to four medical mycology laboratories in Tehran, Isfahan, and Ahwaz, Iran. The fungi were grown on MEA at 28 ºC followed by at least a five-day slide culture and preparation of mount in lactophenol aniline blue. The colonies were studied by observation of the macroscopic morphological features (i.e., growth rate, color, shape, size, and topography) and microscopic examination of the characteristics of the hyphae, conidiophores, conidia, and other conidiation properties [ 9 ].

Molecular characterization

Genomic DNA was extracted from the isolated colonies using the glass-bead phenol-chloroform method as previously described [ 3 ]. The ITS rDNA regions were amplified using 0.25 μM of the fungal universal primers V9G and LS266, 12.5 μL of 2× premix (Ampliqon, Denmark), 1 μL of DNA template, and enough water to produce a final volume of a 25 μL reaction mixture. The PCR cycles consisted of preheating at 94 °C for 5 min, 30 cycles of 30 s at 94 °C, 45 s at 60 °C, and 45 s at 72 °C followed by a final extension step of 7 min at 72 °C. The PCR products were subjected to 1.5% agarose gel electrophoresis and photographed under UV irradiation [ 3 , 28 ].

>Sequencing and phylogenetic analysis

The PCR products were sequenced in one direction by the primer V9G using the ABI PRISM Big Dye Terminator Cycle Sequencing Ready Reaction Kit (Applied Biosystems, Foster City, CA, USA) on an automated DNA sequencer (ABI PrismTM3730 Genetic Analyzer, Applied Biosystems) according to the instructions of the manufacturer. The obtained sequence data were imported into MEGA software (version 6), ambiguous regions were edited manually to improve alignment accuracy, and final identification of isolates was performed by comparing the obtained sequences with the reference sequences of the National Center for Biotechnology Information database.

Sequences were subjected to BioEdit software (version 7.0.5) for pairwise comparisons and multiple alignments to determine intra- and inter-species similarities and differences in nucleotides. The Maximum Likelihood method was applied to the phylogenetic analysis using unambiguously aligned sequences with the Tamura-Nei parameter with substitution model as implemented in the MEGA software (version 7) [ 29 ]. Bootstrap values equal to or greater than 70% were considered significant.

Results

Clinical and environmental strains were collected during a 2-year period. In total, 111 strains of potential melanized fungi were isolated out of 350 samples collected from soil, air, and other different environmental sources. Colony characteristics of each colony were studied and subjected to species identification based on ITS-rDNA sequencing.

The PCR yielded a single band of approximately 950-1000 base pair (bp) on gel electrophoresis. Based on DNA sequencing, the clinical strains (n=9) comprised Alternaria alternata (n=1), Alternaria malorum (n=2), Neoscytalidium dimidiatum (n=2), Neoscytalidium novaehollandiae (n=1), Aureobasidium pullulans (n=1), Curvularia hawaiiensis (n=1), and Cladosporium sphaerospermum (n=1) (Table 1).

No. Age/gender/year Source City Direct examination Isolated on culture Accession nr.
1 36/F/2016 Sinus discharge Tehran Mycelium elements Alternaria alternata KY788023
2 53/M/2016 Sinus discharge Isfahan Mycelium elements Alternaria malorum KY788040
3 27/M/2013 Skin lesion Isfahan Mycelium elements Alternaria malorum JQ219160
4 57/F/2015 Sinus discharge Tehran Mycelium elements Neoscytalidium dimidiatum KY788092
5 49/F/2015 Nail Tehran Mycelium elements Neoscytalidium dimidiatum KY788091
6 52/F/2016 Nail Tehran Mycelium elements Neoscytalidium novaehollandiae KY788097
7 55/M/2014 Nail Ahwaz Mycelium elements Aureobasidium pullulans KY788108
8 65/M/2015 Mouth lesion Tehran Mycelium elements Curvularia hawaiiensis KY788102
9 65/F/2014 Nail Tehran Mycelium elements Cladosporium sphaeroespermum KY788060
Table 1. Summary of characterization, source, and identification of dematiaceous fungi isolated from clinical specimens.

The mean age and age range of patients were 51 and 27-65 years, respectively. Most patients were female (56%) and in the majority of cases, the infection had been present for a long time. In mycological tests, the characteristic mycelium was seen in direct examination of all nine specimens (Table 1). The patients resided in Tehran (66.67%), Isfahan (22.22%), and Ahwaz (11.11%), and none of them suffered from any other predisposing diseases (Table 1).

The environmental strains (n=102) were shown in Table 2. Nucleotide sequences of all isolates were deposited in GenBank under the accession numbers: KY788018–KY788126 and MF422634–MF422636.

City (no.) Source (no.) Taxon name (no.) ITS rDNA Accession nr.
Ahwaz (10) Air (5) Alternaria tenuissima (2), Cladosporium cladosporioides (2), Didymella glomerata (1) KY788031 & KY788032, KY788051 & KY788052, KY788126
Soil (3) Alternaria alternata (1), C. cladosporioides (1), Aureobasidium pullulans (1) KY788027, KY788053, KY788107
Plant (1) Alternaria terricola (1) KY788085
Organic debris (1) A. terricola (1) KY788084
Bushehr (29) Air (11) A. alternata (2), Cladosporium sphaerospermum (2), Curvularia hawaiiensis (2), A. tenuissima (1), Alternaria malorum (1), A. terricola (1), Drechslera dematioidea (1), Embellisia astragali (1) KY788020 & KY788021, KY788061 & KY788062, KY788103 & KY788104, KY788029, MF422634, KY788072, KY788111, KY788122,
Soil (10) Alternaria chlamydospora (2), Curvularia spicifera (2), A. tenuissima (1), Alternaria japonica (1), A. terricola (1), C. cladosporioides (1), C. sphaerospermum (1), D. dematioidea (1) KY788046 & KY788047, KY788098 & KY788099, KY788035, KY788039, KY788073, KY788054, KY788125, KY788112
Plant (4) A. terricola (2), C. cladosporioides (1), Neoscytalidium dimidiatum (1) KY788070 & KY788071, KY788058, KY788094
Wood (4) C. cladosporioides (1), A. tenuissima (1), C. cladosporioides (1), N. dimidiatum (1) KY788059, KY788028, KY788055, KY788093
Isfahan (18) Air (8) A. alternata (2), Alternaria sp. (2), C. cladosporioides (2), C. hawaiiensis (2) KY788025 & KY788124, KY788044 & KY788045, KY788048 & KY788050, KY788105 & KY788106,
Soil (5) A. tenuissima (2), Alternaria sp.(1), C. cladosporioides (1), Ochroconis constricta (1) KY788036 & KY788037, KY788043, KY788049, MF422635
Plant (3) A. terricola (2), N. dimidiatum (1) KY788087 & KY788088, KY788096
Wood (2) A. terricola (1), N. dimidiatum (1) KY788086, KY788095
Shiraz (37) Air (14) D. glomerata (4), D. dematioidea (2), A. alternata (2), A. tenuissima (1), A. malorum (1), A. terricola (1), A. pullulans (1), Ochroconis species (1), E. phaeomuriformis (1), KY788115, KY788116, KY788117 & KY788118, KY788113 & KY788114, KY788019 & KY788022, KY788034, KY788041, KY788077, KY788109, MF422636, KY788120
Soil (11) A. alternata (2), C. sphaerospermum (2), N. dimidiatum (2), A. tenuissima (1), Alternaria rosae (1), A. terricola (1), C. spicifera (1), A. pullulans (1) KY788018 & KY788024, KY788065 & KY788066, KY788089 & KY788090, KY788033, KY788038, KY788079, KY788100, KY788110
Plant (3) Alternaria sp. (1), A. terricola (1), C. sphaerospermum (1) KY788042, KY788082, KY788064
Wood (5) A. terricola (3), C. sphaerospermum (2) KY788078, KY788080 & KY788081, KY788063 & KY788069
Organic debris (4) C. sphaerospermum (2), Ascochyta rabiei (1), A. terricola (1) KY788067 & KY788068, KY788119, KY788083
Yasuj (8) Air (1) C. spicifera (1) KY788101
Soil (4) A. terricola (2), A. alternata (1), A. tenuissima (1) KY788074 & KY788075, KY788026, KY788030
Plant (1) C. cladosporioides (1) KY788056
Wood (1) A. terricola (1) KY788076
Organic debris (1) C. cladosporioides (1) KY788057
Table 2. Environmental dematiaceous fungi isolated from different regions of Iran

Phylogenetic analyses of ITS sequences of the isolated black fungi revealed six orders, namely Pleosporales, Capnodiales, Dothidiales, Chaetothyriales, Botryosphaeriales, and Venturiales (Figure 1). Closely related genera, such as Alternaria , Curvularia, Drechslera , and Didymella species formed well-supported clades with a bootstrap value of 92% while Neoscytalidium and Exophiala clustered with a bootstrap value of 100% (Figure. 1).

Figure 1.Phylogenetic analysis of black fungi species based on the analysis of ITS sequences. The evolutionary history was inferred using the Maximum likelihood method based on the Tamura–Nei model. A: Pleosporales, B: Botryosphaeriales, C: Chaetothyriales, D: Dothidiales, E: Capnodiales, F: Venturiales

Remarkably, species of the order Pleosporales clustered into two clades: Clades 1 and 2. Clade 1 consisted of strains of Alternaria , Curvularia, and Drechslera species while Clade 2 included Didymella as a separate species. The phylogenetic tree revealed Curvularia and Drechslera in Clade 1, forming a sub-clade closely related to Alternaria species. Phylogenetic analysis showed that Cladosporium species belonged to the branch Capnodiales, forming a single group closely related to Dothidiales order (Figure. 1).

In the tree constructed based on the ITS rDNA region, strains of Aureobasidium section Dothidiales were located next to the Chaetothyrials and Capnodiales sections. Member species of Ochroconis belonging to the Venturiales order branched far away from all the other orders of black fungi.

Table 3 shows the comparison between dematiaceous strains based on the number of differences in the nucleotide sequences. A sequence difference count matrix between these strains ranged from 1 to 464 nucleotides with the largest distance being observed between an Ochroconis species and C. sphaerospermum. Meanwhile, intra-species differences were found within different strains of A. alternata, A. alternata, Alternaria tenuissimaCurvulariaspicifera, A. pullulans, C. hawaiiensis, N., dimidiatum,Alternaria terricola, Alternaria chlamydospora, Didymella glomerata, and Drechslera dematioidea by 0-59, 0-22, 0-4, 0-4, 0-3, 0-2, 0-2, 0-2, 0-2, 0-1, and 0-1 nt, respectively (Table 4). Lack of intra-species sequence was observed in A. malorum and C. sphaerospermum (Table 4).

Taxa (Accession nr)
Alternaria. alternata (KY788018) ID
Alternaria. alternata (KY788023) 47 ID
Alternaria. alternata (KY788031) 34 63 ID
Alternaria rosae (KY788038) 73 43 78 ID
Alternaria japonica (KY788039) 49 12 57 42 ID
Alternaria malorum (KY788041) 85 50 83 28 46 ID
Alternaria species (KY788042) 33 62 1 77 56 82 ID
Alternaria chlamydospora (KY788046) 66 28 68 34 33 41 69 ID
Cladosporium cladosporioides (KY788059) 203 238 209 246 242 250 209 240 ID
Cladosporium sphaerospermum (KY788069) 233 266 238 274 270 276 238 268 61 ID
Alternaria terricola (KY788070) 4 46 32 70 47 81 31 63 206 236 ID
Neoscytalidium dimidiatum (KY788094) 197 211 195 211 215 207 195 216 212 234 195 ID
Neoscytalidium novaehollandiae (KY788097) 195 211 194 213 214 208 194 217 213 235 193 4 ID
Curvularia spicifera (KY788100) 114 141 109 138 143 144 110 139 208 236 113 214 213 ID
Curvularia hawaiiensis (KY788104) 114 141 111 138 143 144 112 139 209 237 113 215 214 13 ID
Aureobasidium pullulans (KY788110) 185 202 188 21 202 212 187 205 214 240 187 167 165 215 21 ID
Drechslera dematioidea (KY788111) 114 141 110 138 14 143 111 139 207 235 113 213 212 17 4 217 ID
Didymella glomerata (KY788115) 121 151 117 159 145 165 117 154 212 235 120 202 204 126 126 209 126 ID
Ascochyta rabiei (KY788119) 118 147 115 156 14 161 114 152 202 224 117 198 200 125 126 202 126 26 ID
Exophiala phaeomuriformis (KY788120) 269 277 268 27 278 277 267 279 281 303 272 257 256 275 279 243 279 274 269 ID
Embellisia astragali (KY788122) 70 35 74 36 32 48 75 32 245 273 67 217 220 145 145 215 146 156 153 282 ID
Ochroconis constricta (MF422635) 366 358 364 353 35 344 365 355 389 413 368 345 346 374 370 374 370 374 371 361 352 ID
Ochroconis species (MF422636) 421 409 413 411 408 403 414 406 436 464 421 410 408 422 423 425 422 425 425 429 403 242 ID
Table 3. Sequence variation based on pairwise sequence comparison of rDNA genes of dematiaceous fungi.
Species Numbers Range of intra-species difference (base pair)
Alternaria alternata 7 0-59
Alternaria tenuissima 6 0-4
Alternaria malorum 3 0
Alternaria species 4 0
Alternaria chlamydospora 2 0-2
Neoscytalidium dimidiatum 6 0-2
Aureobasidium pullulans 4 0-3
Curvularia hawaiiensis 5 0-2
Cladosporium sphaerospermum 11 0
Cladosporium cladosporioides 12 0-22
Alternaria terricola 19 0-2
Didymella glomerata 5 0-1
Drechslera dematioidea 4 0-1
Curvularia spicifera 4 0-4
Table 4. Intra-species variation based on pairwise sequence comparison of the rDNA genes of dematiaceous fungi.

Discussion

With increasing recognition of the crucial role of fungi in animal and human infections, diagnostic laboratories are expected to be able to quickly detect and accurately identify fungal pathogens to ensure timely and appropriate therapy for infected patients [ 30 ]. Lack of pigment or poor sporulation, inter-specific similarities, intra-specific diversity, and variation in growth requirements are some of the features that may influence the precise identification of species. Hence, molecular methods are necessary to distinguish and/or re-classify similar and complex taxa of dematiaceous fungi and discover novel and undescribed species [ 9 - 11 ]. Many authors have demonstrated the usefulness of ITS rDNA for species delineation in dematiaceous fungi as the region usually enables discrimination between closely related species [ 3 , 21 , 22 ]. Therefore, in the present study, ITS sequences were utilized for identification as well as phylogenetic analysis of the isolated dematiaceous fungi.

Based on the findings, Alternaria was the predominant genus in both environmental and clinical samples. The results of the present study are compatible with those of previous reports [ 31 ], [ 32 ]. However, in a study performed by Parham et al., Ulocladium species were the predominant fungi among all of the dematiaceous fungi, and this finding is not in line with that of the present research [ 33 ]. The differences may be due to the source of samples, methods, and other reasons [ 3 ].

In the present study, Alternaria species, C. cladosporioides, and C. sphaerospermum were the most commonly observed strains. Differentiation of some species of black fungi, such as Cladosporium species and A. malorum, which are common in both clinical and environmental settings, remains difficult. In this study, isolates identified as Cladosporium species according to the morphological characteristics were recognized as A. malorum based on DNA sequencing. Sequence difference count matrix based on nucleotide pairwise comparison of the ITS region provided evidence showing that this locus was more useful than morphological features for discrimination of these two species.

In a study conducted by Abliz et al., who used the D1/D2 domain for the identification of black fungi, some species of the genus Cladosporium were found to have identical or highly similar sequences with substitutions only at one or two positions [ 8 ]. For such species, ITS-rDNA with greater nucleotide variation has a higher potential for discriminating between species than the D1/D2 domain [ 34 , 35 ]. In recent years, DNA-based studies have shown multiple non-monophyletic genera within the Alternaria complex that do not always associate with species groups based on morphological characteristics.

In the present study, phylogenetic relationships constructed based on sequences of the ITS region from Alternaria isolates and other Pleosporaceae (Ulocladium species, Embellisia species) show the formation of a distinctive clade consisting of A. alternata, A. tenuissima (Alternaria section), A. malorum (Chalastospora section), Alternaria japonica (Japonica section), A. chlamydospora (Phragmosporae section), A. terricola (Ulocladioides section) and Embellisia astragali (Embellisioides section) supported by a bootstrap value of 91%. Results of the present study supported previous observations of the polyphyletic and paraphyletic relationship between Alternaria and the related taxa of Ulocladium and Embellisia.

Among our samples, C. hawaiiensis, C. spicifera, and D. dematioidea were also isolated. Although the genus Curvularia can easily be distinguished from Bipolaris and Drechslera species by sequence analysis, there has been some difficulty in distinguishing them due to their conidial shape, size, and septation. The C. hawaiiensis, C. spicifera, and D. dematioidea went together in our analysis, supported by a bootstrap value of 99%. Moreover, the closely related species, D. glomerata and Ascochyta rabiei formed a separate clade with bootstrap values of 100 (Figure 1).

In this study, Exophiala phaeomuriformis (belonging to the order Chaetothyriales) and two Ochroconis species were isolated. Ochroconis species cause diseases in vertebrate animals and occasionally humans [ 36 ]. Phylogenetic analysis based on sequences of the ITS region from Ochroconis isolates indicated that they stand on a separate branch (Figure 1). The N. dimidiatum andN. novaehollandiae were also among the isolates in the present study. The N. dimidiatum is phylogenetically closely related to N. novaehollandiae [ 37 ]. Results of the present research are consistent with those of a study performed by Polizzi et al. [ 38 ] which indicated that both species fell into the same clade supported by a bootstrap value of 100%.

Sequence variation between strains of dematiaceous fungi led to the observation of clusters with different sections of species. While intra-species sequence diversity of dematiaceous fungi, including A. malorum, Alternaria species, C. sphaerospermum, D. glomerata, and D. dematioidea was low, inter-species nucleotide diversity between most species was quite high. These data advocated that the ITS domain is appropriately variable to be applicable to the identification of several taxa of dematiaceous fungi. The phylogenetic trees constructed from the sequence data revealed that species in the same order segregated into the same cluster.

It was recognized that ITS rDNA sequences do not always provide ample information to differentiate species in the genus Alternaria . The collected data showed a small degree of polymorphism between clinical and environmental isolates as well as a quite low degree of polymorphism within isolates of the same group (non-clinical or clinical group). This might indicate that environmental strains can be a source of human infection. Therefore, more studies on clinical isolates are critical to investigate this issue in greater detail.

Conclusion

In conclusion, identification of black fungi on the basis of morphological characteristics alone is unreliable for the correct determination of species. The ITS sequences were evaluated to be applicable for the identification of several taxa of black fungi. However, for Alternaria species, larger rDNA regions or other gene targets are critical for a better understanding of the taxonomy of this diverse group of fungi.

Acknowledgments

This study was supported by Tehran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran (grant No. 94-172 01-27-28538) and Teikyo University of Medical Mycology, Tokyo, Japan.

Authors’ contribution

Gh.Sh. and H.M. conceptualized and supervised the study. S.N-S., N.J., S.K., M.N., K.M., and M.Gh. provided resources. Gh.Sh. performed the research. Gh.Sh. and B.A. performed formal analysis. Gh.Sh. and H.M. prepared the original draft. H.B., K.M., and K.S. review the draft and edited it. All authors commented on the manuscript. All authors read and approved the final manuscript.

Conflicts of interest

The authors declare that they have no conflicts of interest.

Financial disclosure

No financial interests related to the material of this manuscript have been declared.

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Volume 7, Issue 3
September 2021
Pages 1-8
  • Receive Date: 18 April 2021
  • Revise Date: 04 September 2021
  • Accept Date: 12 September 2021
  • Publish Date: 01 September 2021