TB Research

<i>Gloeostereum cimri</i> , a novel shelf fungus isolated from a human pulmonary cyst

Sarah Ahmed, Sybren de Hoog, Janet Kim, Jayne Crozier, Sarah Thomas, J. Benjamin Stielow, David A. Stevens

Emerging Microbes & Infections · 2020-01

Abstract

Filamentous basidiomycetes are uncommon agents of human diseases, despite their ubiquitous presence in the environment. We present a case of symptomatic pulmonary infection in a 38-year-old male with cough and fever; a thin-walled cyst in the posterior left upper pulmonary lobe was revealed by radiography. A non-sporulating fungus was isolated from sputum and biopsy material from the cyst. ITS and LSU sequences placed the fungus phylogenetically in Agaricales, family Cyphellaceae, and identified it as a member of shelf fungi in Gloeostereum, but without identity to any known species. The new species is described as Gloeostereum cimri. The clinical strain showed high MIC to voriconazole (>8 µg/ml) but had low MIC to amphotericin B (0.5 µg/ml).

MeSH terms

  • Fungus
  • Voriconazole
  • Microbiology
  • Biology
  • Cyst
  • Sputum
  • Amphotericin B
  • Pathology