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Disseminated Candidasis Fungus Science Fair Projects

Hospital Hazards - Disseminated Candidasis Fungus Science Fair Projects
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Hospital fungus infections strike a chord with science fair project participants...

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Hospital Hazards

If you are looking for a topic for your science fair project then go to your local hospital. Hospitals deal with many microbial problems that you can study.

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Test bacteria on any surface with the Surface Microbes Science Fair Projects Kit: after hand sanitizer, hands, disinfectant.. for example. You can use antibiotics to test the bacteria too.

Anytime you want to test how many bacteria are On Top of a surface like a desk, skin, chicken, computer keyboard, bread dough, a hard piece of chocolate, cheese, inside of an animal's cheek, etc. then use the surface experimenter kit. The kit will let you calculate how many bacteria there are per unit surface area on the object. You can also test for e-coli, however, only the microbe water kit will let you distinguish e. coli from other coliforms and bacteria.

 

Objectives/Goals

Disseminated candidiasis occurs in hospitalized patients when the fungus, Candida albicans, enters the bloodstream and infects almost all organs of the body. The mortality rate of this disease is close to 40%. Immunocompromised patients can also develop oropharyngeal candidiasis, or Candida overgrowth in the mouth. Although the mechanisms behind C. albicans defense against reactive oxygen intermediates have already been discovered, the mechanisms for resistance to antimicrobial peptides are still unknown.

Methods/Materials

Sixty-four kinase mutants were screened with protamine containing antimicrobial peptides to discover mutant strains that were hyper-susceptible. Serial dilutions of each strain were pipetted onto protamine and YPD plates, starting at 10^8 cells/ml and decreased by a factor of 10 until the final concentration of organisms was 10^3 cells/ml. Hyper-susceptible strains were retested and the validity of results was further confirmed in a trial using a second, independent clone.

Results

Results from the first 96-well microtiter plate of kinase mutants showed three genes that are responsible for hyper-susceptibility to antimicrobial peptides: PBS2, YCK2, and HST7. Findings from the second 96-well plate of kinase mutants were unconfirmed, but six possible hyper-susceptible strains and some likely hypo-susceptible strains were identified.

Conclusions/Discussion

It was concluded that the genes PBS2, YCK2, and HST7 play a significant role in C. albicans resistance to antimicrobial peptides. Further research to confirm the validity of these results includes gene complementation and a clean knock out of genes. Pharmacologists and other medical researchers can use these findings to determine which genes need to be inhibited when developing medications for Candida infections. 3rd party contributor


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