Malassezia sympodialis and Malassezia furfur are recognized as an important part of the human and animals healthy skin microbiota, but also as an opportunistic fungus due to their association with a broad spectrum of skin and systemic infections. Human skin infections associated with Malassezia spp. are often chronic, recurrent, and topical or oral azole treatments are challenging with not always successful outcomes. A wide inter and intraspecies antifungal susceptibility variability that may suggest a combination of wild-type strains and resistant mutants was reported. The essential oils are complex hydrophobic mixtures of different compounds extracted from plants by distillation and have demonstrated antimicrobial activity. In this study, toxicity in the larvae model and the ability of Origanum vulgare essential oil (OVEO) and carvacrol to inhibit virulence factors such as hydrophobicity, adherence, and biofilm formation of M. sympodialis and M. furfur was evaluated. We have demonstrated the antifungal activity of OVEO and carvacrol against both species. Carvacrol was more active and less toxic than OVEO at low concentrations (< 1 mg/ml). Malassezia sympodialis showed a significant decrease in adherence and its ability to form biofilms when OVEO or carvacrol is present. Both Malassezia species showed reduced hydrophobicity in the presence of carvacrol. Further studies will have to be carried out to understand how these substances act, but the inhibition of some virulence factors could represent a new target to overcome the problem of drug resistance

Modulatory effect of origanum vulgare essential oil and carvacrol on Malassezia spp. virulence factors / Angiolella, Letizia; Rojas, Florencia; Mussin, Javier; Giusiano, Gustavo. - In: MEDICAL MYCOLOGY. - ISSN 1369-3786. - 61:3(2023), pp. 1-8. [10.1093/mmy/myad026]

Modulatory effect of origanum vulgare essential oil and carvacrol on Malassezia spp. virulence factors

Letizia Angiolella
;
2023

Abstract

Malassezia sympodialis and Malassezia furfur are recognized as an important part of the human and animals healthy skin microbiota, but also as an opportunistic fungus due to their association with a broad spectrum of skin and systemic infections. Human skin infections associated with Malassezia spp. are often chronic, recurrent, and topical or oral azole treatments are challenging with not always successful outcomes. A wide inter and intraspecies antifungal susceptibility variability that may suggest a combination of wild-type strains and resistant mutants was reported. The essential oils are complex hydrophobic mixtures of different compounds extracted from plants by distillation and have demonstrated antimicrobial activity. In this study, toxicity in the larvae model and the ability of Origanum vulgare essential oil (OVEO) and carvacrol to inhibit virulence factors such as hydrophobicity, adherence, and biofilm formation of M. sympodialis and M. furfur was evaluated. We have demonstrated the antifungal activity of OVEO and carvacrol against both species. Carvacrol was more active and less toxic than OVEO at low concentrations (< 1 mg/ml). Malassezia sympodialis showed a significant decrease in adherence and its ability to form biofilms when OVEO or carvacrol is present. Both Malassezia species showed reduced hydrophobicity in the presence of carvacrol. Further studies will have to be carried out to understand how these substances act, but the inhibition of some virulence factors could represent a new target to overcome the problem of drug resistance
2023
malassezia spp.; virulence factors; origanum vulgare essential oil; carvacrol; biofilm; adherence; hydrophobicity
01 Pubblicazione su rivista::01a Articolo in rivista
Modulatory effect of origanum vulgare essential oil and carvacrol on Malassezia spp. virulence factors / Angiolella, Letizia; Rojas, Florencia; Mussin, Javier; Giusiano, Gustavo. - In: MEDICAL MYCOLOGY. - ISSN 1369-3786. - 61:3(2023), pp. 1-8. [10.1093/mmy/myad026]
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11573/1676917
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