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Article Abstract

Olorofim (F901318) is a new antifungal currently under clinical development that shows both and activity against a number of filamentous fungi including . In this study, we screened isolates for intrinsic olorofim-resistant and evaluated the ability of to acquire an olorofim-resistant phenotype. No intrinsic resistance was found in 975 clinical isolates. However, we found that isolates with increased olorofim MICs (> 8 mg/L) could be selected using a high number of conidia and olorofim exposure under laboratory conditions. Assessment of the frequency of acquired olorofim resistance development of was shown to be higher than for voriconazole but lower than for itraconazole. Sequencing the gene of isogenic isolates with olorofim MICs of >8 mg/L identified various amino acid substitutions with a hotspot at locus G119. Olorofim was shown to have reduced affinity to mutated target protein dihydroorotate dehydrogenase (DHODH) and the effect of these mutations was proven by introducing the mutations directly in . We then investigated whether G119 mutations were associated with a fitness cost in These experiments showed a small but significant reduction in growth rate for strains with a G119V substitution, while strains with a G119C substitution did not exhibit a reduction in growth rate. These findings were confirmed in an pathogenicity model.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8890541PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/22221751.2022.2034485DOI Listing

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