tugas pendahuluan mikologi d4
1. jelaskan dan gambarkan perbedaan ciri-ciri species Tricophyton sp, epidermophyton sp , mikrosporium canis, microspoium gypseum, candida albicans
2. translate materi di bawah ini: Germ Tube Test- Principle,
Procedure, Results, Interpretation and Limitations
Germ Tube Test is a screening test
which is used to differentiate Candida albicans from other
yeast. Germ tube (GT) formation was first reported by Reynolds and Braude in
1956. When Candida is grown in human or sheep serum at 37°C for 3 hours, they
forms a germ tubes, which can be detected with a wet KOH films as filamentous
outgrowth extending from yeast cells. It is positive for Candida
albicans and Candida dubliniensis. Approximately 95 –
97% of Candida albicans isolated develop germ tubes when
incubated in a proteinaceous media.
Principle of Germ Tube Test
Formation of germ tube is associated with increased
synthesis of protein and ribonucleic acid. Germ Tube solutions contains tryptic
soy broth and fetal bovine serum, essential nutrients for protein synthesis. It
is lyophilized for stability. Germ tube is one of the virulence factors
of Candida albicans. This is a rapid test for the presumptive
identification of C. albicans.
Procedure of Germ Tube Test
1.
Put 0.5 ml of sheep or human serum
into a small tube.
Note: Fetal bovine serum can also be used instead of human serum.
Note: Fetal bovine serum can also be used instead of human serum.
2. Using a Pasteur pipette, touch a colony of yeast and gently
emulsify it in the serum. Note: Too large of an inoculum will inhibit germ
tube formation.
3. Incubated the tube at 37°C for 2 to 4 hours.
4. Transfer a drop of the serum to a slide for examination.
5. Coverslip and examine microscopically under low and high
power objectives.
Results and Interpretation of Germ
Tube Test
Positive Test: A
short hyphal (filamentous) extension arising laterally from a yeast cell, with
no constriction at the point of origin. Germ tube is half the width and 3 to 4
times the length of the yeast cell and there is no presence of nucleus. Examples: Candida
albicans and Candida dubliniensis
Negative Test: No
hyphal (filamentous) extension arising from a yeast cell or a short hyphal
extension constricted at the point of origin. Examples: C.
tropicalis, C. glabrata and other yeasts.
Quality Control in Germ Tube Test
Positive Control: C.
albicans (ATCC 10231)
Negative Control: C.
tropicalis (ATCC 13803), C. glabrata (ATCC 2001)
Limitations of Germ Tube Test
- C.
tropicalis may form early
pseudohyphae which may be falsely interpreted as germ tubes.
- The
yeast formerly named Candida stellatoidea also produces
germ tubes; however, it has been combined with C. albicans and
no longer exists as separate species.
- This
test is only part of the overall scheme for identification of yeasts.
Further testing is required for definite identification.