Rikesh Masania | University of Leicester (original) (raw)
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Papers by Rikesh Masania
Journal of Antimicrobial Chemotherapy, 2020
Background Infections caused by triazole drug-resistant Aspergillus fumigatus are an increasing p... more Background Infections caused by triazole drug-resistant Aspergillus fumigatus are an increasing problem. The sensitivity of standard culture is poor, abrogating susceptibility testing. Early detection of resistance can improve patient outcomes, yet tools for this purpose are limited. Objectives To develop and validate a pyrosequencing technique to detect resistance-conferring cyp51A polymorphisms from clinical respiratory specimens and A. fumigatus isolates. Methods Method validation was performed by Sanger sequencing and pyrosequencing of 50 A. fumigatus isolates with a spectrum of triazole susceptibility patterns. Then, 326 Aspergillus quantitative PCR (qPCR)-positive respiratory samples collected over a 27 month period (January 2017–March 2019) from 160 patients at the UK National Aspergillosis Centre were assessed by cyp51A pyrosequencing. The Sanger sequencing and pyrosequencing results were compared with those from high-volume culture and standard susceptibility testing. Resul...
Medical Mycology Case Reports, 2018
We report a case of Cryptococcus gattii infection in the UK in a 76-year-old woman on biologic th... more We report a case of Cryptococcus gattii infection in the UK in a 76-year-old woman on biologic therapy for intraabdominal non-Hodgkin lymphoma. An incidental nodular lung lesion was found on a chest imaging and histology, culture and molecular mycology studies of the lobectomy specimen revealed the presence of C. gattii.
Future Microbiology, 2018
Aim: To establish the prevalence and antifungal susceptibilities of Aspergillus cryptic species f... more Aim: To establish the prevalence and antifungal susceptibilities of Aspergillus cryptic species from respiratory samples. Methods: Retrospective susceptibility data on Aspergillus species cultured between 2015 and 2017 by ‘high volume culture’ (HVC) versus ‘conventional’ culture techniques. Results: Fifty-six (2.5%) isolates were identified as Aspergillus cryptic species by sequencing of ITS, BenA and CalM gene loci. Recovery was higher in HVCs compared to conventional cultures. Common cryptic species were Aspergillus montevidensis (n = 15), A. creber (n = 11), A. sydowii (n = 5) and A. calidoustus (n = 4). Eighteen (32.1%) isolates had minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) values ≥4 mg/l to amphotericin B, and 19.1–60.1% had MIC values ≥8 mg/l to the triazoles. Conclusion: HVC increases the likelihood of recovery of cryptic species. MIC values to antifungals were high.
Surgical Infections, 2016
Medical Mycology Case Reports, 2015
Invasive fungal infections (IFI) are on the rise due to increasing numbers of immunosuppressed an... more Invasive fungal infections (IFI) are on the rise due to increasing numbers of immunosuppressed and critically ill patients. A malignant-looking pulmonary nodule in an immunosuppressed patient may indeed be caused by a fungal organism. We report a patient, who was eventually diagnosed with an IFI caused by an agent of hyalohyphomycosis, Talaromyces sp. determined via molecular methods and succesfully treated with voriconazole.
Microbiology, 2013
Acquisition of iron from key innate immune defence proteins such as transferrin (Tf) and lactofer... more Acquisition of iron from key innate immune defence proteins such as transferrin (Tf) and lactoferrin is an important mechanism by which pathogenic bacteria obtain essential iron for growth within their host. Bacterial species that do not produce siderophores often use specific Tf-binding proteins, the best characterized being the Neisseriaceae-type Tf-binding proteins TbpA and TbpB. Previous work from our laboratory has shown that siderophore-producing enteric species such as Escherichia coli also readily bind Tf, although no genomic evidence exists for Tbp-like Tf-binding proteins. Application of proteomic analyses and molecular mutagenesis strategies to an enteropathogenic E. coli identified the OmpA and OmpC porins as Tf-binding proteins. Mutagenesis of the ompA or ompC genes affected E. coli Tf binding and, furthermore, compromised the ability of the ompA mutant to respond to growth promotion by certain catecholamine stress hormones. Evidence was also found to implicate the OmpA porin as an entry point for catecholamine stress hormones. Further proteomic analyses in other bacterial pathogens revealed wide-scale involvement of porins in Tf binding: Salmonella typhimurium (OmpC), and Shigella sonnei, Shigella flexneri and Shigella boydii (OmpC and/or OmpA). This study shows that in addition to their existing housekeeping functions, the Gram-negative porin family of proteins can also act as Tf-capture proteins for those bacteria that lack the classical Neisseriaceae-type Tf-binding proteins.
International journal of antimicrobial agents, 2017
Journal of Antimicrobial Chemotherapy, 2020
Background Infections caused by triazole drug-resistant Aspergillus fumigatus are an increasing p... more Background Infections caused by triazole drug-resistant Aspergillus fumigatus are an increasing problem. The sensitivity of standard culture is poor, abrogating susceptibility testing. Early detection of resistance can improve patient outcomes, yet tools for this purpose are limited. Objectives To develop and validate a pyrosequencing technique to detect resistance-conferring cyp51A polymorphisms from clinical respiratory specimens and A. fumigatus isolates. Methods Method validation was performed by Sanger sequencing and pyrosequencing of 50 A. fumigatus isolates with a spectrum of triazole susceptibility patterns. Then, 326 Aspergillus quantitative PCR (qPCR)-positive respiratory samples collected over a 27 month period (January 2017–March 2019) from 160 patients at the UK National Aspergillosis Centre were assessed by cyp51A pyrosequencing. The Sanger sequencing and pyrosequencing results were compared with those from high-volume culture and standard susceptibility testing. Resul...
Medical Mycology Case Reports, 2018
We report a case of Cryptococcus gattii infection in the UK in a 76-year-old woman on biologic th... more We report a case of Cryptococcus gattii infection in the UK in a 76-year-old woman on biologic therapy for intraabdominal non-Hodgkin lymphoma. An incidental nodular lung lesion was found on a chest imaging and histology, culture and molecular mycology studies of the lobectomy specimen revealed the presence of C. gattii.
Future Microbiology, 2018
Aim: To establish the prevalence and antifungal susceptibilities of Aspergillus cryptic species f... more Aim: To establish the prevalence and antifungal susceptibilities of Aspergillus cryptic species from respiratory samples. Methods: Retrospective susceptibility data on Aspergillus species cultured between 2015 and 2017 by ‘high volume culture’ (HVC) versus ‘conventional’ culture techniques. Results: Fifty-six (2.5%) isolates were identified as Aspergillus cryptic species by sequencing of ITS, BenA and CalM gene loci. Recovery was higher in HVCs compared to conventional cultures. Common cryptic species were Aspergillus montevidensis (n = 15), A. creber (n = 11), A. sydowii (n = 5) and A. calidoustus (n = 4). Eighteen (32.1%) isolates had minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) values ≥4 mg/l to amphotericin B, and 19.1–60.1% had MIC values ≥8 mg/l to the triazoles. Conclusion: HVC increases the likelihood of recovery of cryptic species. MIC values to antifungals were high.
Surgical Infections, 2016
Medical Mycology Case Reports, 2015
Invasive fungal infections (IFI) are on the rise due to increasing numbers of immunosuppressed an... more Invasive fungal infections (IFI) are on the rise due to increasing numbers of immunosuppressed and critically ill patients. A malignant-looking pulmonary nodule in an immunosuppressed patient may indeed be caused by a fungal organism. We report a patient, who was eventually diagnosed with an IFI caused by an agent of hyalohyphomycosis, Talaromyces sp. determined via molecular methods and succesfully treated with voriconazole.
Microbiology, 2013
Acquisition of iron from key innate immune defence proteins such as transferrin (Tf) and lactofer... more Acquisition of iron from key innate immune defence proteins such as transferrin (Tf) and lactoferrin is an important mechanism by which pathogenic bacteria obtain essential iron for growth within their host. Bacterial species that do not produce siderophores often use specific Tf-binding proteins, the best characterized being the Neisseriaceae-type Tf-binding proteins TbpA and TbpB. Previous work from our laboratory has shown that siderophore-producing enteric species such as Escherichia coli also readily bind Tf, although no genomic evidence exists for Tbp-like Tf-binding proteins. Application of proteomic analyses and molecular mutagenesis strategies to an enteropathogenic E. coli identified the OmpA and OmpC porins as Tf-binding proteins. Mutagenesis of the ompA or ompC genes affected E. coli Tf binding and, furthermore, compromised the ability of the ompA mutant to respond to growth promotion by certain catecholamine stress hormones. Evidence was also found to implicate the OmpA porin as an entry point for catecholamine stress hormones. Further proteomic analyses in other bacterial pathogens revealed wide-scale involvement of porins in Tf binding: Salmonella typhimurium (OmpC), and Shigella sonnei, Shigella flexneri and Shigella boydii (OmpC and/or OmpA). This study shows that in addition to their existing housekeeping functions, the Gram-negative porin family of proteins can also act as Tf-capture proteins for those bacteria that lack the classical Neisseriaceae-type Tf-binding proteins.
International journal of antimicrobial agents, 2017