Biofilm-related characteristics of Candida parapsilosis in postoperative ocular infections
Yuxuan Wu, Min Kang, Zhiqun Wang, Yang Zhang, Kexin Chen, Qingfeng Liang, Xinxin Lu

TL;DR
This study shows that Candida parapsilosis forms strong biofilms in postoperative eye infections, which affects antifungal treatment and suggests using caspofungin for better outcomes.
Contribution
The study reveals that C. parapsilosis has superior biofilm-forming ability at 4°C and suggests using caspofungin for biofilm-related infections.
Findings
Candida parapsilosis forms stronger biofilms at 4°C compared to other Candida species.
Biofilm-grown Candida shows higher antifungal resistance than planktonic cells.
Caspofungin is effective against both planktonic and biofilm forms of Candida isolates.
Abstract
The research aims to elucidate the pathogenic mechanisms of Candida parapsilosis infection after keratoplasty and provide evidence-based guidance for the clinical management of Candida infections in ophthalmic practice. Biofilms were cultured from 45 strains of Candida. The total biomass of the biofilms was measured using the crystal violet staining method, and the biofilm activity was assessed via the XTT reduction assay. Cell surface hydrophobicity and adhesion were evaluated for all Candida strains. The minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) of planktonic Candida was determined using the colorimetric microbroth dilution method, while the MIC of biofilm-embedded Candida was measured via the XTT reduction assay. The release of 1, 3-β-D-glucan was detected using the G-test, and the chemotactic ability of 1, 3-β-D-glucan on neutrophils was evaluated via the Transwell assay. Molecular…
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Taxonomy
TopicsOcular Infections and Treatments · Sinusitis and nasal conditions · Ocular Surface and Contact Lens
