All Notes

Laboratory Requirements for Evaluating Mushroom Antifungal Activity against Clinical Dermatophytes

Introduction

To effectively evaluate mushrooms’ antifungal activity against clinical dermatophytes, laboratories require specialized equipment and techniques for fungal isolation, identification, and susceptibility testing. These include media for fungal culture, microscopy for morphological identification, and standardized methods like agar-based disk diffusion (ABDD) or broth microdilution for antifungal sensitivity testing.

Laboratory Requirements

CategoryEssential Items and Practices
1. Biosafety & Infrastructure• Work in a Class II biosafety cabinet; consequently, you prevent spore aerosol escape.
• Maintain BSL-2 laboratory space; therefore, you meet dermatophyte handling guidelines.
• Autoclave all waste immediately; moreover, post a biohazard sign outside.
2. Fungal Isolates• Source edible or medicinal mushrooms, fresh or dried.
• Authenticate each species botanically; additionally, deposit voucher specimens in a herbarium.
3. Mushroom Material• Grind samples with a sterile blender.
• Use Soxhlet or an ultrasound bath for solvent extraction; moreover, choose ethanol, methanol, or water.
4. Extraction Setup• Analyze MIC data with statistical software; additionally, calculate fractional inhibitory concentration indices.
• Secure IRB approval for isolated use; furthermore, anonymize patient data.
5. Media & Reagents• Prepare Sabouraud Dextrose Agar/Broth, Potato Dextrose Agar.
• Add chloramphenicol; consequently, you suppress bacterial contaminants.
• Store Mueller-Hinton Broth for checkerboard assays.
6. Susceptibility Methods• Perform CLSI M38-A2 broth microdilution; furthermore, validate each batch with A. flavus ATCC 204304.
• Run agar-well diffusion as a rapid screen.
• Include fluconazole and terbinafine as positive controls.
7. Equipment• Use an incubator set at 28 ± 2 °C for dermatophytes.
• Calibrate a spectrophotometer or plate reader; therefore, you quantify MIC endpoints accurately.
• Operate a rotary evaporator to concentrate extracts.
8. Quality Control• Record media pH daily; moreover, keep it at 7.0 ± 0.2.
• Verify inoculum density at 0.4–5 × 10⁴ CFU/mL.
• Run triplicate assays; consequently, you ensure reproducibility.
9. Data & Ethics• Analyze MIC data with statistical software; additionally, calculate fractional inhibitory concentration indices.
• Secure IRB approval for isolate use; furthermore, anonymize patient data.

Summary

Equip a BSL-2 lab with a biosafety cabinet, validated dermatophyte cultures, authenticated mushroom extracts, CLSI-compliant susceptibility platforms, and rigorous QC procedures. Consequently, we can generate reliable antifungal activity data that withstands peer review.

Further Readings on Laboratory Requirements for Evaluating Mushroom Antifungal Activity

  1. https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC88720/#:~:text=(iii)%20Determination%20of%20conidial%20growth,conidia%20on%20different%20agar%20media.
  2. https://www.scirp.org/journal/paperinformation?paperid=111132#:~:text=The%20identification%20of%20dermatophytes%20was,%2C%205%25%20tinea%20faciei.
  3. https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC4965208/#:~:text=The%20laboratory%20identification%20of%20dermatophytes,using%20the%20ABDD%20susceptibility%20method.
  4. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6714203/#:~:text=Microscopy%20and%20culture%20characteristics%20of,the%20specimens%20%5BFigure%202%5D.&text=arthroconidia%20(%C3%97200)-,T.,%E2%80%8B4%20and%20Table%202%5D.
  5. https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC6714203/#:~:text=Mycology%20laboratory%20procedures,%2Dvitro%20hair%20perforation%20test).
  6. https://www.vdl.ndsu.edu/dermatophyte-submission-guide-2/#:~:text=Clipped%20hair%20may%20be%20falsely,vigorously%20brushed%20over%20inflamed%20areas.
  7. https://academic.oup.com/jpids/article/12/4/214/7071623#:~:text=Antifungal%20susceptibility%20testing%20(AFST)%20can,minimum%20effective%20concentration%20(MEC).
  8. https://www.medicinearticle.com/JMR_201512_08.pdf
  9. https://eajm.org/content/files/sayilar/194/buyuk/26-31.pdf
  10. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4833739/#:~:text=Disk%20diffusion%20assay.,to%207%20days%20(24).
  11. https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC4711191/#:~:text=Two%20organizations%2C%20the%20European%20Committee,be%20reviewed%20in%20this%20manuscript.
  12. https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC5715923/
Medical Lab Notes

Share
Published by
Medical Lab Notes

Recent Posts

TB-LAMP: Introduction, Principle, Procedure, Result Interpretation, and Keynotes

Introduction TB-LAMP (Tuberculosis Loop-Mediated Isothermal Amplification) is a manual, rapid molecular diagnostic test endorsed by…

2 days ago

NALC -NAOH Preparation for Tuberculosis Lab: Introduction, Procedure, Application, and Keynotes

Introduction The NALC-NaOH (N-acetyl-L-cysteine–sodium hydroxide) method is the gold standard for processing clinical specimens in…

3 days ago

BD BACTEC™ MGIT™ 960: Principles, Workflows, and Clinical Applications

Introduction The BD BACTEC™ MGIT™ 960 (Mycobacteria Growth Indicator Tube) is a fully automated, high-volume…

3 days ago

Trichosporon species: Introduction, Morphology, Medically Important Species, Pathogenicity, Lab Diagnosis, Treatment, Prevention, and Keynotes

Introduction Trichosporon is a genus of anamorphic, yeast-like basidiomycetous fungi widely distributed in nature, particularly…

5 days ago

Saprochaete capitata:Introduction, Morphology, Pathogenicity, Lab Diagnosis, Treatment, Prevention, and Keynotes

Introduction Saprochaete capitata is an emerging opportunistic fungal pathogen that causes severe, frequently fatal systemic…

6 days ago

Sphingomonas paucimobilis-Introduction, Morphology, Pathogenicity, Lab Diagnosis, Treatment, Prevention, and Keynotes

Introduction Sphingomonas paucimobilis (formerly classified as Pseudomonas paucimobilis) is a strictly aerobic, non-fermenting, Gram-negative bacillus.…

7 days ago