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Journal of Clinical Microbiology logoLink to Journal of Clinical Microbiology
. 2005 Feb;43(2):551–555. doi: 10.1128/JCM.43.2.551-555.2005

Multiple Genetically Distinct Groups Revealed among Clinical Isolates Identified as Atypical Aspergillus fumigatus

Margaret E Katz 1,*, Annette M Dougall 1, Kerry Weeks 2, Brian F Cheetham 1
PMCID: PMC548029  PMID: 15695644

Abstract

To investigate whether genetic variants of A. fumigatus are found among clinical isolates, four isolates that were originally identified as poorly sporulating strains of Aspergillus fumigatus were subjected to molecular analysis. DNA sequence analysis of the alkaline protease genes of these isolates showed that each is genetically distinct and each shows substantial variation (7 to 11%) from the A. fumigatus nucleotide sequence. Subsequent morphological examination suggested that all of the isolates could be classified as Aspergillus viridinutans. To clarify the taxonomic status of these four clinical isolates and of two previously identified as atypical A. fumigatus isolates, partial β-tubulin and 18S rRNA gene sequences were determined. Each of the six atypical strains had a unique β-tubulin sequence, whereas the sequences of three standard isolates of A. fumigatus, which were included as controls, were identical to the published A. fumigatus β-tubulin sequence. The very low level of DNA sequence variation detected in standard isolates of A. fumigatus compared with other isolates from members of Aspergillus section Fumigati suggests that it may be a relatively recently evolved species. The 18S rRNA gene of two of the atypical isolates differed from that of A. fumigatus at a single nucleotide position. Phylogenetic analyses do not support the classification of all of these isolates as A. viridinutans. Thus, some of these isolates represent new species which are potential opportunistic pathogens.


Aspergillus fumigatus is the species most commonly associated with aspergillosis in immunocompromised patients. A number of DNA-based methods have been developed to detect A. fumigatus for diagnostic purposes and to type strains to study the origin and transmission of nosocomial infections. Diagnostic methods using PCR rely on amplification of specific DNA sequences, which could vary between strains. Sequence analysis of protein coding genes such as the cytochrome b gene (21) has revealed little or no sequence variation between standard isolates of A. fumigatus. In contrast, seven isolates of Aspergillus viridinutans, another asexual species in the section Fumigati, showed considerable genetic variability in β-tubulin gene sequences (19).

Members of the Aspergillus section Fumigati are distinguished by the profiles of mycotoxins and secondary metabolites that they produce (2) and, in the case of species with known sexual states (genus Neosartorya), the morphology of the ascospores (17). The evolutionary relationship of A. fumigatus to other species from Aspergillus section Fumigati has been investigated using DNA sequence data obtained from the β-tubulin gene (3), the hydrophobin gene (3), and the mitochondrial cytochrome b gene (21). These analyses have shown that morphological variation in isolates of A. fumigatus is not necessarily accompanied by variation in chemical profiles or DNA sequences (2, 21).

In a previous study, DNA sequence analysis of the alkaline protease gene (Alp) was used to investigate two atypical isolates of A. fumigatus (NSW3 and FRR 1266) (8). The sequence obtained from an isolate with standard morphology (QLD1) showed greater than 99% identity with published sequences for three human isolates. However, the two atypical isolates differed by more than 6 and 10% of the nucleotides, respectively (8). Subsequent phylogenetic analysis of β-tubulin sequences by Varga et al. (20) indicated that FRR 1266 is closely related to A. viridinutans. In this study, we use DNA sequence analysis of the Alp, β-tubulin, and 18S rRNA genes to clarify the taxonomic status of these isolates and four additional clinical isolates with similar characteristics.

MATERIALS AND METHODS

Fungal strains.

The strains used in this study are listed in Table 1. Isolates MK245, MK246, MK284, and MK285 were obtained from the Mycology Reference Laboratory, Royal North Shore Hospital, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia, for identification. Strains NSW3 and QLD1 were obtained from ostriches suffering from aspergillosis (7). These six isolates were considered to be the causative agent of aspergillus infections. FRR 581, FRR 582, and FRR 1266 were provided by Ailsa Hocking and John Pitt of the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation, Food Science Australia, North Ryde, New South Wales, Australia. The six atypical isolates described in this paper have been deposited in the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation FRR Culture Collection, North Ryde, New South Wales, 1670 Australia.

TABLE 1.

Source of fungal strains

Strain Source Country of origin Morphologya FRR no.b
MK245 Human transplant tissue Recipient, lung Australia Atypical 5678
MK246 Cat, thoracic mass Australia Atypical 5679
MK284 Cat, retrobulbar abscess Australia Atypical 5680
MK285 Cat, respiratory tract Australia Atypical 5681
NSW3 Ostrich, air sac-lungs Australia Atypical 5677
FRR 1266 Soil Australia Atypical 1266
QLD1 Ostrich, air sac-lungs Australia Standard
FRR 581 City refuse Indonesia Standard 581
FRR 582 Soil Indonesia Standard 582
a

Strains exhibiting colony morphology typical of A. fumigatus are listed as standard.

b

FRR Culture Collection, Food Science Australia, P.O. Box 52, North Ryde, NSW 1670, Australia.

PCR amplification.

The PCR primers that were used in this study are listed in Table 2.

TABLE 2.

PCR primers used in this study

Namea Target gene Sequence
rRNA1 18S rRNA 5′-GTGAAACTGCGAATGGCTCA-3′
rRNA2 18S rRNA 5′-CCAACTTTCCGGCTCTGGGG-3′
alp1 Alkaline protease 5′-AAACGCAATCTGGAGCGTCG-3′
alp2 Alkaline protease 5′-CATTGCCATTGTAGGCAAGC-3′
alp3 Alkaline protease 5′-ATTCCTGGCAAGTACATCGTGACCTTCAAG-3′
alp4 Alkaline protease 5′-ATTGCCATTGTAGGCAAGCTTGTTGGGGCT-3′
benA1 β-Tubulin 5′-AATAGGTGCCGCTTTCTGG-3′
benA2 β-Tubulin 5′-AGTTGTCGGGACGGAAGAG-3′
a

Primer rRNA1 corresponds to nucleotides 43 to 62 and primer rRNA2 is complementary to nucleotides 1669 to 1688 in the 18S rRNA gene of A. fumigatus (11). Primer alp1 corresponds to nucleotides 480 to 499 and primer alp2 is complementary to nucleotides 1676 to 1695 in the Alp gene of A. fumigatus (6). Primer alp3 corresponds to nucleotides 393 in the Alp protease gene of A. fumigatus (6). Primers benA1 and benA2 are described in Geiser et al. (3).

DNA sequencing.

The DNA sequences of the PCR products were determined by a combination of direct sequencing of the PCR product and sequencing of the cloned PCR products and subclones derived thereof by standard molecular techniques (16). The sequences of both strands of the Alp gene PCR products were determined. The 18S rRNA gene PCR products were sequenced on one strand and compared to the sequence of the 18S rRNA gene of A. fumigatus. When nucleotide sequence differences were detected, they were confirmed by sequencing both strands. The β-tubulin PCR products were sequenced with the benA1 and benA2 primers as described in Geiser et al. (3).

Fungal morphology.

The morphology of strains MK245, MK246, MK284, MK285, NSW3, and FRR 1266 was examined by John Pitt and Ailsa Hocking at Food Science Australia, North Ryde, New South Wales, Australia.

RESULTS

Alkaline protease gene amplification.

Genetic variation in four clinical isolates (MK245, MK246, MK284, and MK285) was initially assessed by DNA sequence analysis of the Alp gene. Primers alp1 and alp2, which were used previously to amplify part of the Alp gene of A. fumigatus and genetic variants (7, 8), failed to yield amplification products from two of the isolates, MK246 and MK284. Longer primers (alp3 and alp4), based on regions of high similarity in the Alp genes of A. fumigatus, Aspergillus oryzae, Aspergillus nidulans, and Aspergillus flavus, were synthesized (Table 2) and were successfully used to amplify a 1.3-kb section of the Alp gene.

Phylogenetic analysis of alkaline protease gene sequences.

The sequences of the Alp PCR products from the four clinical isolates were compared to the sequences from two strains which we had analyzed previously (NSW3 and FRR 1266) and published sequences for A. fumigatus and other Aspergillus species (Table 3). The isolates fell into two classes. The Alp gene sequence of MK245 showed the highest similarity to NSW3, and the Alp gene of both of these isolates showed a similar degree of nucleotide similarity to the Alp of A. fumigatus (93%) (Table 4). MK246, MK284, and MK285 showed the highest similarity to FRR 1266, and the Alp genes from this group of strain showed 88 to 89% identity to the A. fumigatus Alp gene. The Alp gene sequences of the four clinical isolates were each unique, but the MK246 and MK284 sequences differed by only 2%. Phylogenetic analysis of the Alp sequences supports the division of the six isolates into two groups (Fig. 1). MK245 and NSW3 form a cluster with A. fumigatus (cluster 1), whereas MK246, MK284, MK285, and FRR 1266 form a separate cluster in this tree (cluster 2).

TABLE 3.

Sequences used in phylogenetic analyses

Species Strain Gene Accession no.a Reference
Aspergillus sp. MK245 Alkaline protease AY590134 (G) This study
β-Tubulin AY590128 (G) This study
Aspergillus sp. MK246 Alkaline protease AY590135 (G) This study
β-Tubulin AY590129 (G) This study
Aspergillus sp. MK284 Alkaline protease AY590136 (G) This study
β-Tubulin AY590130 (G) This study
Aspergillus sp. MK285 Alkaline protease AY590137 (G) This study
β-Tubulin AY590133 (G) This study
Aspergillus sp. NSW3 Alkaline protease Y15871 (E) 8
β-Tubulin AY590132 (G) This study
Aspergillus sp. FRR 1266 Alkaline protease Y15873 (E) 8
β-Tubulin AY590131 (G) This study
A. brevipes NRRL 2439 β-Tubulin AF057311 (G) 3
Aspergillus clavatus H522 β-Tubulin AF057312 (G) 3
A. flavus 28 Alkaline protease S67840 (E) 14
Aspergillus fumigatus var. ellipticus NRRL 5109 β-Tubulin AF057314 (G) 3
A. fumigatus HD133 β-Tubulin AF057315 (G) 3
CHUV-192-88 Alkaline protease Z11580 (Y) 6
A. nidulans MH2 Alkaline protease L31778 (G) 9
A. oryzae ATCC 20386 Alkaline protease S79617 (G) 10
Aspergillus niger N400 Alkaline protease L19059 (G) 5
A. viridinutans IMI 062875 β-Tubulin AF134779 (G) 19
A. viridinutans IMI 133982 β-Tubulin AF134775 (G) 19
A. viridinutans IMI 182127 β-Tubulin AF134777 (G) 19
A. viridinutans IMI 280490 β-Tubulin AF134780 (G) 19
A. viridinutans NRRL 6106 β-Tubulin AF134778 (G) 19
N. aureola NRRL 2244 β-Tubulin AF057319 (G) 3
N. fischeri NRRL 181 β-Tubulin AF057322 (G) 3
N. pseudofischeri NRRL 20748 β-Tubulin AF057325 (G) 3
N. spinosa NRRL 5034 β-Tubulin AF057329 (G) 3
Trichoderma harzianum IMI 206040 Alkaline protease M87518 (G) 4
a

Sequences were obtained from GenBank (G) or EMBL (E) DNA databases through the Australian National Genome Information Service (ANGIS).

TABLE 4.

DNA sequence similarity in the alkaline protease genes of Aspergillusa

Organismb 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12
1 A. fumigatus 100
2 NSW3 93 100
3 MK245 93 95 100
4 FRR 1266 88 92 90 100
5 MK285 89 91 90 94 100
6 MK246 89 91 91 94 94 100
7 MK284 89 91 91 94 95 98 100
8 A. oryzae 72 73 72 70 71 71 71 100
9 A. nidulans 68 69 69 69 69 69 69 65 100
10 A. flavus 67 67 67 66 66 66 66 67 64 100
11 A. niger 61 62 62 61 61 61 61 60 59 62 100
12 T. harzianum 47 48 48 48 47 47 47 47 47 49 45 100
a

Percent identical nucleotides are given for the sequences corresponding to nucleotides 480 to 1664 in the Alp gene of A. fumigatus (6).

b

The source of the Alp gene sequences is given in Table 3.

FIG. 1.

FIG. 1.

Phylogenetic tree based on the DNA sequences corresponding to nucleotides 480 to 1664 in the alkaline protease gene of A. fumigatus (6). The sources of the DNA sequences used in the analysis are given in Table 3. The tree was constructed using the PILEUP, ESEQBOOT, EDNAPARS, and ECONSENSE programs in the PHYLIP computer package (1) through the Australian National Genome Information Service (ANGIS). Only bootstrap values of >60% are shown.

Morphology.

To determine whether the two groups of isolates were distinguished by morphological differences, the isolates were reexamined by John Pitt and Ailsa Hocking at Food Science Australia without prior knowledge of the results of the phylogenetic analysis. They concluded that all the isolates could be classified as A. viridinutans. Colonies of A. viridinutans resemble those of A. fumigatus, except that sporulation is reduced, so colonies are pale green blue rather than deep blue, and growth at 37°C is slower with a colony diameter of 50 mm after 7 days on Czapek yeast agar, rather than >70 mm. A. viridinutans is distinct microscopically in having stipes that are short, <50 μm long, and often bent just below the vesicle to give an asymmetrical appearance, termed nodding by Raper and Fennell (15). Stipes of A. fumigatus are straight and often 300 μm long. Vesicles are small and up to 15 μm wide, while those of A. fumigatus are up to 30 μm in diameter. A. viridinutans appears to be endemic to Australia (J. Pitt, personal communication).

Analysis of β-tubulin gene sequences.

Partial β-tubulin gene sequences were available for a number of A. viridinutans isolates (19) and other species in Aspergillus section Fumigati (3, 20). To allow comparison of the six atypical isolates with other members of Aspergillus section Fumigati, the same section of the β-tubulin gene used in previous analyses was amplified with the primers designed by Geiser et al. (3), and the DNA sequences of the PCR products were determined.

Phylogenetic analysis of the β-tubulin gene sequences from the six atypical isolates, six isolates of A. viridinutans (19), and other species from Aspergillus section Fumigati is shown in Fig. 2. The phylogenetic tree generated by the DNA sequence parsimony method is similar to that shown in Fig. 1 in that it places the cluster 1 and 2 isolates in separate lineages. However, the topology within cluster 1 differs with respect to the position of MK285 (cluster 1b). The cluster 1a isolates (MK246, MK284, and FRR 1266) are grouped with four of the six A. viridinutans isolates, including the type strain IMI 062875. The tree also indicates that MK285 is closely related to Neosartorya aureola (cluster 1b), NSW3 to Neosartorya spinosa (cluster 2c), and MK245 to A. viridinutans IMI 306135 (cluster 2b). The neighbor-joining method gave a tree with identical topology, except that the positions of Aspergillus brevipes and Neosartorya pseudofischeri were exchanged (data not shown).

FIG. 2.

FIG. 2.

Phylogenetic tree based on the DNA sequences corresponding to nucleotides 1 to 453 in the partial β-tubulin gene sequence of A. fumigatus (3). The sources of the DNA sequences used in the analysis are given in Table 3. The tree was constructed using the PILEUP, ESEQBOOT, EDNAPARS, and ECONSENSE programs in the PHYLIP computer package (1) available through ANGIS. Only bootstrap values of >60% are shown. The type strain (T) of A. viridinutans is indicated.

Partial β-tubulin gene sequences were obtained from three standard isolates of A. fumigatus (Table 1). All sequences were identical to the A. fumigatus sequence reported by Geiser et al. (3). In contrast, a maximum of 98% similarity was observed in the β-tubulin gene sequences of the other isolates that were analyzed (Table 5).

TABLE 5.

DNA sequence similarity in the β-tubulin genes of Aspergillusa

Organismb 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11
1 A. fumigatus 100
2 A. viridinutans IMI 062875 90 100
3 NSW3 92 96 100
4 MK245 91 94 95 100
5 MK285 90 96 95 93 100
6 FRR 1266 90 96 96 93 95 100
7 MK246 89 95 94 92 94 94 100
8 MK284 89 94 95 92 93 94 98 100
9 N. fischeri 94 93 95 94 93 93 92 91 100
10 N. aureola 88 93 95 93 98 94 93 92 92 100
11 N. spinosa 92 97 98 95 96 96 95 94 96 95 100
a

Percent identical nucleotides are given for the sequences corresponding to nucleotides 1 to 453 in the partial β-tubulin gene sequence of A. fumigatus (3). For each pair of sequences, the shorter sequence was used in calculating percent identical nucleotides.

b

The source of the β-tubulin gene sequences is given in Table 3.

Sequence analysis of the 18S rRNA gene.

The DNA sequence of a 347-bp section of the 18S rRNA gene of NSW3 and FRR 1266 had previously been shown to be identical to the sequence of the 18S rRNA gene of A. fumigatus (8). To further investigate the taxonomic status of these two strains and the four atypical clinical isolates, 1.6 kb of the 18S rRNA gene from each isolate was determined. The DNA sequence of the PCR product generated with primers rRNA1 and rRNA2 (Table 2) from the cluster 1a isolates MK246 and MK285 contained a single nucleotide difference, T instead of C at position 483 of the A. fumigatus 18S rRNA gene sequence reported by Nikkuni et al. (11). The sequences of the remaining four atypical isolates in clusters 1 and 2 were identical to the A. fumigatus 18S rRNA gene.

DISCUSSION

Though morphological examination of the two isolates from cluster 2 (NSW3 and MK245) indicated that they could be classified as A. viridinutans, phylogenetic analysis did not. It has been shown that species recognition based on morphological differences often leads to the inclusion of two or more species, as defined by phylogenetic analyses or mating tests, in a single morphological species (18). For example, nine species were recognized within Fusarium graminearum, based on the phylogenetic analysis of 11 genes (12). Morphological characters, which could be used to distinguish some of these phylogenetically distinct species, were subsequently identified. It may be that further phenotypic examination of the isolates will reveal characteristics which distinguish the atypical isolates in cluster 1 from cluster 2.

The partial β-tubulin gene sequences of two of the atypical isolates show 98% identity with Neosartorya species, NSW3 with N. spinosa (cluster 2c) and MK285 with N. aureola (cluster 1b). These results suggest that these two isolates may represent asexual mutants derived from Neosartorya species or may be closely related asexual species.

MK245 (cluster 2b) grouped with A. viridinutans IMI 306135 (isolated from soil in western Australia) which Varga suggested may represent a new species or a highly unusual isolate of A. fumigatus based on toxin profiles, mitochondrial DNA, restriction fragment length polymorphism analyses, and partial β-tubulin sequences (19). Thus, cluster 2b represents an undescribed species of Aspergillus that is capable of infecting immunocompromised patients.

The partial β-tubulin gene sequences of all the atypical isolates and strains classified as A. viridinutans were unique. In contrast, the partial β-tubulin gene sequences of three standard A. fumigatus isolates from Australia and Indonesia are identical to the sequence obtained from A. fumigatus strain HD133 from the Institut Pasteur in Paris, France. The very low level of DNA sequence variation detected in A. fumigatus compared with other isolates from members of Aspergillus section Fumigati suggests that it may be a relatively recently evolved species.

DNA sequence analysis of two protein-encoding genes of the cluster 1a isolates revealed a considerable degree of genetic variation in this group of strains (from 2 to 8% in pairwise comparisons) (Table 5 and data not shown). The high level of DNA sequence variation and phylogenetic analyses indicate that this group may contain several cryptic species. However, the separate clades within cluster 1a are not all strongly supported. Furthermore, the phylogenetic tree of Alp sequences includes MK285 within this group of atypical isolates, whereas the tree of β-tubulin sequences does not. The phylogenetic species recognition approach proposed by Taylor et al. (18) is based on concordance of multiple gene genealogies. As only two polymorphic genes have been analyzed and the resulting two trees are not concordant, the asexual strains within cluster 1 could be considered a single species (A. viridinutans) by this method. Analysis of additional genes will be required to clarify the taxonomic status of this group.

Analysis of the 18S rRNA gene showed that four of the isolates had a sequence identical to A. fumigatus, and the others (MK246 and MK284) differed at only one position. Thus, some of the isolates in clusters 1 and 2 share an identical 18S rRNA gene sequence. The sequence of the Neosartorya fischeri 18S rRNA gene (GenBank accession no. NFU21299) contains a single-base-pair deletion corresponding to position 1327 of the A. fumigatus sequence (8). Based on our experience with sequencing the 18S rRNA gene, this difference is likely to be due to a sequencing error, as we have observed sequencing anomalies at exactly that position. The sequences of the A. viridinutans, N. aureola, and N. spinosa 18S rRNA genes have not been determined. Sequence analysis of the 28S rRNA genes of A. fumigatus, N. fischeri, N. aureola, and N. spinosa strains has revealed sequence differences between these four species (13). There is no accepted rule on the number of nucleotide differences in rRNA genes which define different species or genera.

Acknowledgments

We gratefully acknowledge the technical assistance of Ron Wicks and Karen Gray. We thank John Pitt and Ailsa Hocking for morphological examinations and David Backhouse for helpful discussions.

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