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Study of the role of iron in the anticryptococcal activity of human serum and fluconazole
Authors:Devina D Grover  Elmer Brummer  David A Stevens
Institution:(1) Division of Infectious Diseases, Department of Medicine, Santa Clara Valley Medical Center, USA;(2) California Institute for Medical Research, San Jose, California;(3) California and Stanford University Medical School, Stanford, CA, USA
Abstract:Anticryptococcal activity of human serum and apotransferrin in RPMI 1640 was studied in vitro. The effects of varying concentrations of FeCl3 on this activity was investigated. Possible synergy of serum and apotransferrin with fluconazole was also measured. The fungistatic activity of human serum, whether lyophilized, stored at 4 °C, fresh frozen or purchased from commercial sources vs. Cryptococcus neoformans was comparable. There was no significant loss of fungistatic activity after freezing and thawing the serum up to 10 times. The fungistatic activity of human serum was similar when tested in different tissue culture media with the exception of Medium 199. The addition of apotransferrin (2.0 or 0.2 mg/ml) to RPMI 1640 had an inhibitory effect on cryptococcal growth. This effect was reversed by 20 mgrM of FeCl3 at both apotransferrin concentrations. By contrast, addition of FeCl3 to human serum and RPMI 1640 did not reverse inhibition of growth. Fluconazole synergized with the human serum preparations described, but not with pooled commercial serum, for fungicidal activity. Synergistic activity of fluconazole and human serum was not affected by the addition of FeCl3. Apotransferrin did not show any synergistic fungicidal activity with fluconazole.
Keywords:cryptococcus  fluconazole  iron  serum
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