PLoS ONE 2012-01-01

Triazole fungicides can induce cross-resistance to medical triazoles in Aspergillus fumigatus.

Eveline Snelders, Simone M T Camps, Anna Karawajczyk, Gijs Schaftenaar, Gert H J Kema, Henrich A van der Lee, Corné H Klaassen, Willem J G Melchers, Paul E Verweij

Index: PLoS ONE 7(3) , e31801, (2012)

Full Text: HTML

Abstract

Azoles play an important role in the management of Aspergillus diseases. Azole resistance is an emerging global problem in Aspergillus fumigatus, and may develop through patient therapy. In addition, an environmental route of resistance development has been suggested through exposure to 14α-demethylase inhibitors (DMIs). The main resistance mechanism associated with this putative fungicide-driven route is a combination of alterations in the Cyp51A-gene (TR(34)/L98H). We investigated if TR(34)/L98H could have developed through exposure to DMIs.Thirty-one compounds that have been authorized for use as fungicides, herbicides, herbicide safeners and plant growth regulators in The Netherlands between 1970 and 2005, were investigated for cross-resistance to medical triazoles. Furthermore, CYP51-protein homology modeling and molecule alignment studies were performed to identify similarity in molecule structure and docking modes. Five triazole DMIs, propiconazole, bromuconazole, tebuconazole, epoxiconazole and difenoconazole, showed very similar molecule structures to the medical triazoles and adopted similar poses while docking the protein. These DMIs also showed the greatest cross-resistance and, importantly, were authorized for use between 1990 and 1996, directly preceding the recovery of the first clinical TR(34)/L98H isolate in 1998. Through microsatellite genotyping of TR(34)/L98H isolates we were able to calculate that the first isolate would have arisen in 1997, confirming the results of the abovementioned experiments. Finally, we performed induction experiments to investigate if TR(34)/L98H could be induced under laboratory conditions. One isolate evolved from two copies of the tandem repeat to three, indicating that fungicide pressure can indeed result in these genomic changes.Our findings support a fungicide-driven route of TR(34)/L98H development in A. fumigatus. Similar molecule structure characteristics of five triazole DMIs and the three medical triazoles appear the underlying mechanism of cross resistance development. Our findings have major implications for the assessment of health risks associated with the use of triazole DMIs.


Related Compounds

Related Articles:

Molecular modelling of the emergence of azole resistance in Mycosphaerella graminicola.

2011-01-01

[PLoS ONE 6(6) , e20973, (2011)]

Enantiomeric separation of triazole fungicides with 3-μm and 5-μml particle chiral columns by reverse-phase high-performance liquid chromatography.

2011-07-01

[Chirality 23(6) , 479-86, (2011)]

Inhibition of efflux transporter-mediated fungicide resistance in Pyrenophora tritici-repentis by a derivative of 4'-hydroxyflavone and enhancement of fungicide activity.

2005-06-01

[Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 71(6) , 3269-75, (2005)]

Cuticular uptake of xenobiotics into living plants. Part 2: influence of the xenobiotic dose on the uptake of bentazone, epoxiconazole and pyraclostrobin, applied in the presence of various surfactants, into Chenopodium album, Sinapis alba and Triticum aestivum leaves.

2006-07-01

[Pest Manag. Sci. 62(7) , 664-72, (2006)]

Selected pesticides adsorption and desorption in substrates from artificial wetland and forest buffer.

2011-07-01

[Environ. Toxicol. Chem. 30(7) , 1669-76, (2011)]

More Articles...