Help! Please Register

  The Fungi

  Introduction
  Descriptions
  Synonyms
  Image Bank
  Lecture Bank
  Video Bank


  Mycoses

  Introduction
  Human
  Veterinary
  Environmental
   Industrial
  Agricultural
  MSG


  Drugs

  Introduction
  Medical
  Veterinary
  Environmental
   Industrial
  Agricultural


  Laboratory

  Introduction
  Susceptibility
  MIC Database
  Procedures
  Histopathology


  Education &
  Tools

  Introduction
  Abbreviations
  Links
  CME
  Conference
   Highlights
  Bibliography
  Glossary
  Good Books
  Events Calendar


  About Us

  Introduction
  Our Mission
  Editorial Board
  Editorial Staff
  Supporters
  Contributors
  Legal Stuff
  Privacy Policy
  Kudos


  The Fungi

  Introduction
  Descriptions
  Synonyms
  Image Bank
  Lecture Bank
  Video Bank



This page updated:
1/27/2007 9:23:00 AM


DoctorFungus - All Rights Reserved © 2007 Copyright
& Privacy Policy


Site built and designed for doctorfungus by Webillustrated



You are here: The Fungi > Descriptions >


Aspergillus niger
Van Tieghem, 1867

Macroscopic morphology

Colonies on potato dextrose agar at 25°C are initially white, quickly becoming black with conidial production. Reverse is pale yellow and growth may produce radial fissures in the agar.

Microscopic morphology

Hyphae are septate and hyaline. Conidial heads are radiate initially, splitting into columns at maturity. The species is biseriate (vesicles produces sterile cells known as metulae that support the conidiogenous phialides). Conidiophores are long (400-3000 µm), smooth, and hyaline, becoming darker at the apex and terminating in a globose vesicle (30-75 µm in diameter). Metulae and phialides cover the entire vesicle. Conidia are brown to black, very rough, globose, and measure 4-5 µm in diameter [2202], [531].

Special notes

Organism is a common secondary invader following bacterial otitis [2153]. May also cause pulmonary disease in immunocompromised patients and the production of oxalate crystals in clinical specimens [1611].

FTL* in vitro susceptibility data

AMB CAS ITRA VORI POSA KETO TERB 5FC MICA ANID
0.125 µg/ml=2 0.03 µg/ml=16 0.03 µg/ml=1 0.06 µg/ml=1 0.03 µg/ml=1 2.0 µg/ml=1 0.015 µg/ml=1 8 µg/ml=2 ≤0.03 µg/ml=1 ≤0.03 µg/ml=1
0.25 µg/ml=8 0.125 µg/ml=31 0.125 µg/ml=3 0.125 µg/ml=3 0.06 µg/ml=3 4.0 µg/ml=5 0.03 µg/ml=4 16 µg/ml=1    
0.5 µg/ml=47 0.25 µg/ml=8 0.25 µg/ml=6 0.25 µg/ml=4 0.125 µg/ml=6 8.0 µg/ml=4 0.06 µg/ml=1 64 µg/ml=2    
1.0 µg/ml=35 0.5 µg/ml=1 0.5 µg/ml=23 0.5 µg/ml=38 0.25 µg/ml=6 16 µg/ml=1 0.125 µg/ml=3 >64 µg/ml=3    
16 µg/ml=1   1.0 µg/ml=29 1.0 µg/ml=31            
    2.0 µg/ml=5 2.0 µg/ml=4            
    4.0 µg/ml=5              
    8.0 µg/ml=2              


Drug/N AMB/93 CAS/56 ITRA/74 VORI/81 POSA/16
MIC Range 0.125-16 0.03-0.5 0.03-1.0 0.125-2.0 0.06-0.25
MIC50 0.5 0.125 0.5 0.5 0.125
MIC90 1.0 0.25 1.0 1.0 0.25
* Fungus Testing Laboratory unpublished data (NCCLS M38-A)


Search

PubMed

Nucleotides

GenBank



Biseriate fruiting head
Biseriate fruiting head



References

531. de Hoog, G. S., J. Guarro, J. Gene, and M. J. Figueras. 2000. Atlas of Clinical Fungi, 2nd ed, vol. 1. Centraalbureau voor Schimmelcultures, Utrecht, The Netherlands.

1611. Nakagawa, Y., K. Shimazu, M. Ebihara, and K. Nakagawa. 1999. Aspergillus niger pneumonia with fatal pulmonary oxalosis. J Infect Chemother. 5:97-100.

2153. Steinbach, W. J., and D. A. Stevens. 2003. Review of newer antifungal and immunomodulatory strategies for invasive aspergillosis. Clin Infect Dis. 37:S157-S187.

2202. Sutton, D. A., A. W. Fothergill, and M. G. Rinaldi (ed.). 1998. Guide to Clinically Significant Fungi, 1st ed. Williams & Wilkins, Baltimore.



  Home | Image Bank | Lecture Bank | Knowledgebase | Site Map | Contact Us |
The Fungi | Mycoses | Drugs |
Laboratory | Education & Tools | About Us

  bttm_banner_indv2_02[1].gif