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Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, May 2003, p. 1565-1570, Vol. 47, No. 5
0066-4804/03/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/AAC.47.5.1565-1570.2003
Copyright © 2003, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Fungicidal Synergism of Fluconazole and Cyclosporine in Candida albicans Is Not Dependent on Multidrug Efflux Transporters Encoded by the CDR1, CDR2, CaMDR1, and FLU1 Genes
Oscar Marchetti,1 Philippe Moreillon,1 Josè M. Entenza,1 Jacques Vouillamoz,1 Michel P. Glauser,1 Jacques Bille,2 and Dominique Sanglard2*
Division of Infectious Diseases, Department of Internal Medicine,1
Institute of Microbiology, Centre Hospitalier Universitaire Vaudois, Lausanne, Switzerland2
Received 26 September 2002/
Returned for modification 6 December 2002/
Accepted 6 February 2003

ABSTRACT
The combination of fluconazole (FLC) and cyclosporine (CY) is
fungicidal in FLC-susceptible
C. albicans (O. Marchetti, P.
Moreillon, M. P. Glauser, J. Bille, and D. Sanglard, Antimicrob.
Agents Chemother. 44:2373-2381, 2000). The mechanism of this
synergism is unknown. CY has several cellular targets including
multidrug efflux transporters. The hypothesis that CY might
inhibit FLC efflux was investigated by comparing the effect
of FLC-CY in FLC-susceptible parent CAF2-1 (FLC MIC, 0.25 mg/liter)
and in FLC-hypersusceptible mutant DSY1024 (FLC MIC, 0.03 mg/liter),
in which the
CDR1,
CDR2,
CaMDR1, and
FLU1 transporter genes
have been selectively deleted. We postulated that a loss of
the fungicidal effect of FLC-CY in DSY1024 would confirm the
roles of these efflux pumps. Time-kill curve studies showed
a more potent fungistatic effect of FLC (
P = 0.05 at 48 h with
an inoculum of 10
3 CFU/ml) and a more rapid fungicidal effect
of FLC-CY (
P = 0.05 at 24 h with an inoculum of 10
3 CFU/ml)
in the FLC-hypersusceptible mutant compared to those in the
parent. Rats with experimental endocarditis were treated for
2 or 5 days with high-dose FLC, high-dose CY, or both drugs
combined. FLC monotherapy for 5 days was more effective against
the hypersusceptible mutant than against the parent. However,
the addition of CY to FLC still conferred a therapeutic advantage
in animals infected with mutant DSY1024, as indicated by better
survival (
P = 0.04 versus the results obtained with FLC) and
sterilization of valves and kidneys after a very short (2-day)
treatment (
P = 0.009 and 0.002, respectively, versus the results
obtained with FLC). Both in vitro and in vivo experiments consistently
showed that the deletion of the four membrane transporters in
DSY1024 did not result in loss of the fungicidal effect of FLC-CY.
Yet, the accelerated killing in the mutant suggested a "dual-hit"
mechanism involving FLC hypersusceptibility due to the efflux
pump elimination and fungicidal activity conferred by CY. Thus,
inhibition of multidrug efflux transporters encoded by
CDR1,
CDR2,
CaMDR1, and
FLU1 genes is not responsible for the fungicidal
synergism of FLC-CY. Other cellular targets must be considered.

INTRODUCTION
Progress in modern medicine has led to a worldwide increase
in the incidence of
Candida infections (
2,
25). Amphotericin
B, a fungicidal agent, has been the standard treatment for these
infections for decades, but the toxicity of its conventional
form and the costs of its lipid forms limit its use. Other antifungal
agents, such as azoles, have excellent efficacy-toxicity profiles
and play an important role in the treatment of candidal infections
in nonneutropenic patients, although they have mostly fungistatic
activities (
13,
18,
19). However, the treatment of candidiasis
during neutropenia and the emergence of azole-resistant
Candida species continue to represent major challenges (
1,
17,
19,
25-
27).
Thus, new therapeutic strategies need to be developed. In
Candida albicans, efflux pumps play a major role in azole susceptibility
and may represent a new therapeutic target (
22). Promising results
were reported in studies in which efflux of cytotoxic agents
was inhibited in multiresistant human cancer cells (
10,
24).
As mammalian and fungal multidrug efflux transporters (METs)
have strong structural homologies, human efflux pump inhibitors
were screened in vitro to determine whether they have synergistic
activities with fluconazole (FLC) against
C. albicans. We found
that the combination of FLC and cyclosporine (CY) is fungicidal
against FLC-susceptible
C. albicans strains (
13). This powerful
synergism was confirmed in experimental endocarditis. The association
of FLC and CY was fungicidal against infection in aortic valve
vegetations, a model of localized neutropenia, as well as in
the kidney, an organ with a neutrophil-phagocytic host response
(
11). Although this phenomenon was discovered during the screening
of inhibitors of efflux pumps in cancer cells, the mechanism
of the synergism of FLC and CY in
C. albicans is unknown. CY
has several cellular targets including the cell membrane, METs,
and the cyclophilin-calmodulin-calcineurin pathway. Thus, its
interaction with FLC might intervene at different sites (
9).
The objective of the present work was to investigate the involvement
of METs encoded by the
CDR1,
CDR2,
CaMDR1, and
FLU1 genes, which
have been found to mediate FLC efflux in
C. albicans. We postulated
that their deletion would result in the loss of the fungicidal
synergism of FLC-CY. For this purpose, the in vitro and in vivo
activities of the combination of FLC and CY were compared against
FLC-susceptible parent strain
C. albicans CAF2-1 and FLC-hypersusceptible
mutant
C. albicans DSY1024, obtained by targeted deletion of
the MET genes
CDR1,
CDR2,
CaMDR1, and
FLU1 (
3,
21).

MATERIALS AND METHODS
Strains, media, and growth conditions.
The following isolates were used:
C. albicans CAF2-1 (Ura
+ parental
strain; FLC MIC, 0.25 mg/liter (
6),
C. albicans DSY1024 (
cdr1
::
hisG/
cdr1
::
hisG cdr2
::
hisG/
cdr2
::
hisG camdr1
::
hisG/
camdr1
::
hisG flu1
::
hisG/
flu1
::
hisG-URA3-hisG,
constructed by making targeted gene deletions in parent strain
CAF4-2; FLC MIC, 0.03 mg/liter) (
3,
21), and
C. albicans ATCC
90028 (a quality control strain used for in vitro susceptibility
testing; FLC MIC, 0.25 to 1 mg/liter) (
16).
Isolates were stocked at -70°C in liquid medium supplemented with 10% (vol/vol) glycerol, maintained at 4°C, and subcultured twice at 35°C before each experiment.
Sabouraud liquid medium (Diagnostics Pasteur, Marnes la Coquette, France) was used for overnight growth in a shaking incubator at 30°C and 200 rpm.
Plates containing Sabouraud dextrose with 2% agar (Difco, Basel, Switzerland) were used to maintain or subculture the tested strains and for colony-counting studies.
RPMI 1640 with L-glutamine without bicarbonate (Difco) buffered with 0.165 M morpholinepropanesulfonic acid (Fluka, Basel, Switzerland) was used for MIC determinations and time-kill curve studies (16).
Drugs and reagents.
FLC for in vitro testing was kindly provided by Pfizer (Sandwich, United Kingdom). FLC for intravenous administration (Diflucan) for in vivo experiments was purchased from Pfizer (Zürich, Switzerland). CY for in vitro studies was purchased from Sigma (Buchs, Switzerland). CY for intravenous administration (Sandimmun) for in vivo treatments was purchased from Novartis Pharma (Basel, Switzerland).
A CY stock solution was constituted in dimethyl sulfoxide (1 mg/liter) and further diluted in H2O or RPMI 1640, as appropriate. All other chemicals were commercially available reagent-grade products.
Susceptibility testing.
The MICs were determined by broth microdilution according to the recommendations outlined in NCCLS approved standard M27-A (16).
Time-kill curve studies.
C. albicans CAF2-1 and C. albicans DSY1024 were tested in RPMI 1640 by broth macrodilution under experimental conditions identical to those recommended by the NCCLS for MIC testing (16). The strains were grown overnight at 30°C and 200 rpm. Tubes (10 ml) containing CY (0.6 mg/liter), FLC (10 mg/liter), or FLC-CY (10 and 0.6 mg/liter, respectively) at concentrations achievable in vivo and 103 or 105 CFU of the tested isolate per ml were incubated at 35°C. To study the effects of these different treatments on viable counts after 12, 24, and 48 h of incubation, an aliquot (100 µl) from each test tube was subcultured after serial dilution on Sabouraud dextrose agar plates and incubated for 48 h at 35°C (13). Any decrease in the viable counts of the starting inoculum was considered killing. Killing of >99.9% (3 logs) of the starting inoculum was defined as a fungicidal effect (15). Since the limit of detection was 101 CFU/ml, the presence of a fungicidal effect (a >3-log decrease in viable counts) could be evaluated only in experiments with an initial inoculum of 105 CFU/ml. The results were reported as the mean colony counts from triplicate experiments.
Experimental endocarditis.
Female Wistar rats (weight, 200 g; Iffa Credo, Lyon, France) with sterile catheter-induced aortic valve vegetations were challenged intravenously, as reported previously (8, 11), with 6 x 105 CFU of C. albicans CAF2-1 or DSY1024. Treatment was started at 12 h postchallenge and was administered for 2 or 5 days. To assess the baseline infectious load, control animals were killed at the 12-h time point. The following high-dose regimens were administered once daily to rats infected with CAF2-1 or DSY1024: FLC at 20 mg/kg of body weight/day intraperitoneally (n = 12), CY at 10 mg/kg/day subcutaneously (n = 6), or FLC at 20 mg/kg/day intraperitoneally plus CY at 10 mg/kg/day subcutaneously (n = 9). To monitor the natural course of infection, untreated animals infected with CAF2-1 or DSY1024 were studied (n = 6 animals for each strain). Survival in the different groups was recorded daily. Day 0 corresponded to treatment onset; day 5 corresponded to the end of observation. Moribund animals were killed, and the following day was recorded as the time of death. Rats receiving FLC, CY, or FLC-CY were killed 24 h after the second drug administration (2-day treatment) or 48 h after the fifth drug administration (5-day treatment) in order to ensure drug washout and avoid carryover onto the plates for viable count studies, as shown previously (11). The data for animals undergoing scheduled killing were censored for survival analysis. Aortic valve vegetations and kidneys were dissected, weighed, homogenized in 1 and 2 ml of saline, respectively, serially diluted, and plated. Candida colony counts were recorded after a 3-day incubation at 35°C. Fungal densities were calculated by a previously used formula (11) and expressed as log10 CFU per gram of tissue. Each treatment experiment with animals infected with either the parent or the mutant was performed in duplicate.
The susceptibilities to FLC of both the parent and the mutant were tested ex vivo by using single colonies growing from persistently infected vegetations and kidneys. The FLC and CY concentrations in the plasma of treated rats were determined on the first and last days of therapy and at the time of killing, as described previously (11, 12).
Statistical analysis.
The Mann-Whitney test was used to compare viable counts in time-kill curve studies. Survival curves were compared by the log-rank test. Fungal densities in tissues were compared by the Mann-Whitney test or the Kruskal-Wallis analysis of variance on ranks followed by pairwise comparison, as appropriate. The rates of persistently infected organs were compared by Fisher's exact test. All tests were two tailed, and the significance level was set at P < 0.05. The Bonferroni correction was used for multiple testing.

RESULTS
Time-kill (in vitro) experiments.
Time-kill experiments (Fig.
1A) were performed with 10
3 CFU
of
C. albicans CAF2-1 or DSY1024 per ml, the initial inoculum
recommended by present guidelines for antifungal susceptibility
testing (
16). The viable counts for the growth controls of both
strains were comparable. The fungistatic effect of FLC was more
marked against the hypersusceptible mutant than against the
parent. The mean viable counts after 48 h of incubation were
3.7
x 10
4 CFU/ml (range, 2.3
x 10
4 to 5.5
x 10
4 CFU/ml) and
3.06
x 10
5 CFU/ml (range, 1.8
x 10
4 to 5
x 10
5 CFU/ml), respectively
(
P = 0.05). In contrast, CY alone had no antifungal activity
against either the parent or the mutant. In both strains, the
combination of FLC and CY was fungicidal. However, the killing
effect was accelerated in the mutant compared to that in the
parent. The mean viable counts after 24 h of incubation were
2.2
x 10 CFU/ml (range, 1.9
x 10 to 2.7
x 10 CFU/ml) and 1.83
x 10
2 CFU/ml (range 9
x 10 to 3
x 10
2 CFU/ml), respectively
(
P = 0.05). The results of time-kill curve studies with an initial
inoculum of 10
5 CFU/ml, a baseline condition more close to that
of the in vivo model of experimental endocarditis, are shown
in Fig.
1B. In contrast to experiments with a lower inoculum,
no difference in growth inhibition by FLC alone was found after
48 h of incubation. Killing induced by the combination of FLC
and CY was similar in strains DSY1024 and CAF2-1 after 48 h
of incubation (>99.9% decrease in viable counts in both strains).
Yet, a trend for a more rapid decrease in viable counts was
found in the mutant compared to that in the parent. The mean
viable counts at 24 h were 1.16
x 10
2 CFU/ml (range, 8.6
x 10
to 1.5
x 10
2 CFU/ml) and 2
x 10
3 CFU/ml (range, 1
x 10
3 to 3
x 10
3 CFU/ml), respectively (
P = 0.10).
In vivo experiments. (i) Survival studies with rats with experimental endocarditis.
Figure
2 shows the survival curves for untreated animals and
animals treated with FLC, CY, or FLC-CY after infection with
FLC-susceptible parent strain CAF2-1 or FLC-hypersusceptible
mutant DSY1024. In rats infected with CAF2-1, 5-day mortality
rates with no treatment (
n = 12) and with CY treatment (
n =
12) were 100 and 85%, respectively. The results for animals
infected with DSY1024 were identical: no treatment (
n = 12)
and CY treatment (
n = 12) both resulted in 100% mortality at
5 days. FLC (
n = 24 for the group infected with the parent strain,
n = 24 for the group infected with the mutant) and FLC-CY (
n = 18 for the group infected with the parent strain,
n = 18 for
the group infected with the mutant) improved rates of survival
significantly compared to those for untreated or CY-treated
animals infected with either strain (for the group infected
with the parent strain, for FLC and FLC-CY versus the control,
P = 0.03 and
P = 0.008, respectively, and versus CY,
P = 0.06
and
P = 0.01, respectively; for the group infected with the
mutant, for FLC and FLC-CY versus the control
P = 0.06 and
P = 0.0008, respectively, and versus CY,
P = 0.09 and
P = 0.0008,
respectively). However, no statistically significant survival
advantage was found between FLC and FLC-CY in animals infected
with CAF2-1. In contrast, in animals infected with DSY1024,
treatment with the combination of FLC and CY significantly improved
the survival rate compared to that after treatment with FLC
alone (
P = 0.04).
(ii) Therapeutic results for experimental endocarditis after a 2-day treatment.
Figure
3 summarizes the results observed in the vegetations
and kidneys of untreated animals and animals receiving FLC or
FLC-CY after infection with parent strain CAF2-1 or mutant DSY1024.
The baseline fungal load in both target organs after infection
with CAF2-1 was similar to that in the organs of rats infected
with DSY1024. Among the animals with endocarditis, only the
group infected with DSY1024 and treated with FLC-CY was successfully
cured: all rats had sterile aortic valve vegetations (
P = 0.009
for comparison of fungal densities,
P = 0.0008 for comparison
of infection eradication rates to those for animals infected
with DSY1024 and treated with FLC alone). In all other groups,
the fungal densities in the aortic valves were not different
from those in the aortic valves of the controls at the baseline.
In the kidneys of animals infected with strain CAF2-1, FLC was
partially effective (
P = 0.003 versus the counts for the controls
at the baseline) and FLC-CY was better than FLC alone (
P = 0.0008).
In rats infected with mutant DSY1024, the results of treatment
with FLC were similar to those obtained with strain CAF2-1 (
P = 0.004 versus the counts for the controls at the baseline).
However, the effect of the combination of FLC and CY was powerful,
with the combination sterilizing all organs in DSY1024-infected
rats (
P = 0.002 for comparison of fungal densities or eradication
rates to those for FLC-treated animals,
P = 0.003 for comparison
of fungal densities and
P = 0.0006 for comparison of infection
eradication rates to those for CAF2-1-infected rats treated
with FLC-CY). CY alone had no antifungal activity: as for the
untreated controls, the fungal densities in the vegetations
and kidneys of animals infected with either the parent or the
mutant were comparable to those observed at the baseline (data
not shown). The ex vivo FLC MICs for isolates from all animals
with persistently infected valves and/or kidneys despite FLC
or FLC-CY treatment were identical to those measured before
inoculation (0.25 mg/liter for CAF2-1 and 0.03 mg/liter for
DSY1024).
(iii) Therapeutic results for experimental endocarditis after a 5-day treatment.
The results for the 5-day treatments are shown in Fig.
4. Among
the animals with endocarditis, FLC was effective only against
DSY1024, sterilizing the valves of six of seven (86%) of the
animals (
P = 0.04 for comparison of fungal densities and
P =
0.003 for comparison of infection eradication rates to those
for the controls at the baseline,
P = 0.05 for comparison of
fungal densities to those for rats infected with CAF2-1 and
treated with FLC). FLC-CY sterilized most vegetations in rats
infected with either CAF2-1 (six of eight rats; 75%) or DSY1024
(eight of eight rats; 100%). Significant differences between
FLC-CY-treated rats and the corresponding controls at the baseline
were found in comparisons of fungal densities (
P = 0.008 for
CAF2-1 and
P = 0.0007 for DSY1024, respectively) and infection
eradication rates (
P = 0.03 for CAF2-1 and
P = 0.0009 for DSY1024,
respectively). Moreover, when FLC-CY was compared to FLC in
CAF2-1-infected rats, differences in fungal densities (
P = 0.04)
and infection eradication rates (six of eight [75%] versus two
of nine [22%] rats [
P = 0.06]) were found. Although treatment
with FLC was successful in kidneys infected with either strain
(
P = 0.0006 for comparison of the fungal densities to those
for the controls at the baseline), this regimen was more effective
against DSY1024 than against CAF2-1 (
P = 0.02). The combination
of FLC and CY was the most effective treatment, sterilizing
the majority of the organs infected with CAF2-1 (seven of eight;
88%) or DSY1024 (eight of eight; 100%). For both strains, significant
differences were found in a comparison of the fungal densities
to those for the controls at the baseline (
P = 0.0007) or to
those for FLC-treated rats (
P = 0.0006). When infection eradication
rates were compared to those for the controls at the baseline,
similar differences were found (
P = 0.003 for CAF2-1,
P = 0.0007
for DSY1024). CY alone did not display any activity against
the organisms in the vegetations or in the kidneys of animals
infected with either strain: as for the untreated controls,
fungal densities were higher than those measured at the baseline
(data not shown). The ex vivo FLC MIC for isolates from all
animals with persistently infected valves and/or kidneys despite
FLC or FLC-CY treatment were identical to those measured before
inoculation (0.25 mg/liter for CAF2-1 and 0.03 mg/liter for
DSY1024).

DISCUSSION
Efflux pumps belonging to two different classes, the ATP-binding
cassette and the major facilitators, play a major role in the
susceptibilities of yeasts to azole antifungals. Their upregulation
results in resistance, and their targeted deletion results in
increased susceptibility (
22). The fungicidal synergism of FLC
and CY in FLC-susceptible
C. albicans was found during the screening
of mammalian MET inhibitors for potentiation of the antifungal
effect of FLC. Interestingly, despite the lack of intrinsic
antifungal activity, CY conferred a killing effect on FLC, leaving
its MIC unchanged (
13). This unusual synergism of an azole antifungal
and an immunosuppressive agent was confirmed in vivo. The combination
of FLC and CY was successful in eradicating infection in aortic
valve vegetations and the kidneys in a model of experimental
endocarditis (
11). However, the mechanism underlying this observation
is unknown. In other eukaryotic cells, CY has several targets
such as membrane-bound multidrug transporters, the cell membrane
itself, and the cyclophilin-calmodulin-calcineurin pathway (
7,
14). The interaction of CY with calcineurin results, for example,
in the inhibition of interleukin-1 synthesis in human T cells
and in cell death in some parasites (
23). Four METs encoded
by the
CDR1,
CDR2,
CaMDR1, and
FLU1 genes, respectively, have
been identified in
C. albicans. As these transporters mediate
FLC efflux,
C. albicans strains from which the genes for METs
are deleted show increased susceptibilities to FLC (
21). Moreover,
according to the initial working hypothesis of FLC efflux inhibition
by CY, a loss of the killing effect conferred by CY on FLC would
be expected in a
C. albicans mutant lacking these METs. The
goal of the present work was to compare the effects of FLC and
CY in this FLC-hypersusceptible mutant (DYS1024; FLC MIC, 0.03
mg/liter) and in the parent strain (CAF2-1; FLC MIC, 0.25 mg/liter).
Time-kill curves for DSY1024 and CAF2-1 with an inoculum of 103 CFU/ml showed the enhanced inhibitory effect of FLC induced by the targeted deletion of the CDR1, CDR2, CaMDR1, and FLU1 genes. On the other hand, the fungicidal effect of CY and FLC against DSY1024 not only was maintained but was also more rapid than that against CAF2-1. High-dose treatments with FLC and FLC-CY were tested in rats infected with CAF2-1 or DSY1024. In order to discriminate the effect of the antifungal treatment from that of host defenses, infection was studied in two different targets, aortic valve vegetations, with their neutropenic environment, and the kidneys, with their massive recruitment of polymorphonuclear phagocytes (11). The absence of polymorphonuclear phagocytes in endocarditis provides very stringent experimental conditions, and therapeutic success relies exclusively on the killing effect of the antimicrobial treatment. Given that previous studies of Candida experimental endocarditis described cure only after weeks of antifungal treatment, the sterilization of aortic valve vegetations recently reported in rats infected with parent strain CAF2-1 after a 5-day treatment with high doses of FLC-CY represented a clear proof of concept (4, 11, 28). The present work tested identical regimens, which, as in previous experiments, produced supratherapeutic blood FLC concentrations (i.e., trough levels up to 15 mg/liter, a concentration still compatible with that achieved with high-dose treatment in humans) and CY (i.e., trough levels up to 2.5 mg/liter, which is 5- to 10-fold the concentrations targeted in humans) (data not shown) (11). The virulences of the parent and the mutant from which efflux pumps were deleted were similar, as assessed by the fungal densities at the baseline and the rates of mortality among untreated animals. CY alone had no activity against either fungal strain. The improved antifungal efficacy of FLC against the organisms in both the vegetations and the kidneys after a 5-day treatment in animals infected with the mutant was compatible with the more favorable pharmacodynamics of FLC (higher in vivo FLC levels/MIC ratios resulting from identical dosing schedules and a fourfold lower FLC MIC for DSY1024). The limited survival advantage and the prolonged time to cure for animals infected with either CAF2-1 or DSY1024 and treated with FLC and for those infected with the parent and treated with FLC-CY were not due to the emergence of FLC resistance, as demonstrated by ex vivo susceptibility testing of isolates from persistently infected vegetations and kidneys. The delayed eradication of infection in these groups in vivo was consistent with the fungistatic effect of FLC against either the parent or the mutant and the slow fungicidal activity of FLC-CY against CAF2-1, achieving >99.9% killing only after 48 h in vitro. This is in contrast to the powerful fungicidal activity displayed by the combination of FLC and CY in DSY1024-infected animals: survival was significantly improved compared to that among rats treated with FLC alone, and infection could be eradicated from both the vegetations and the kidneys after a 2-day treatment. These striking results obtained with DSY1024 in vivo are consistent with the accelerated killing observed in vitro, in which the combination of FLC and CY was already fungicidal after 24 h of incubation. Despite the limitations of the present study (use of a single strain in a single in vitro condition and in a single experimental animal model), both in vitro and in vivo experiments showed that METs encoded by the CDR1, CDR2, CaMDR1, and FLU1 genes are not involved in the powerful fungicidal synergism of FLC and CY. Moreover, the accelerated killing effect against DSY1024 suggests a "dual-hit" mechanism involving MET deletion-induced FLC hypersusceptibility and killing conferred by CY. Although the inhibition of other unrecognized METs should be considered, recent observations from other investigators and from our laboratory suggest that calcineurin could play a key role in this phenomenon (5, 20). Thus, the cellular mechanisms underlying this new and promising therapeutic concept deserve further investigation. On the other hand, studies with other azole antifungals and CY analogues lacking immunosuppressive properties are needed.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
We thank Marlyse Giddey, Françoise Ischer, Marlies Knaup,
and Paul Antony Majcherczyk for outstanding technical assistance.
D.S. is supported by grant 3100-055901 from the Swiss National Found for Scientific Research, and P.M. is supported by grant 3200-044099 from the Swiss National Found for Scientific Research.

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Institut de Microbiologie, Rue du Bugnon 44, CH-1011 Lausanne, Switzerland. Phone: 41 21 3144083. Fax: 41 21 3144060. E-mail:
Dominique.Sanglard{at}chuv.hospvd.ch.


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Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, May 2003, p. 1565-1570, Vol. 47, No. 5
0066-4804/03/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/AAC.47.5.1565-1570.2003
Copyright © 2003, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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