Introduction
Human
Veterinary
Environmental
Industrial
Agricultural
Introduction
Medical
Veterinary
Environmental
Industrial
Agricultural
Introduction
Susceptibility
MIC Database
Procedures
Histopathology
Introduction
Abbreviations
Links
CME
Conference
Highlights
Bibliography
Glossary
Good Books
Events
Calendar
Introduction
Our Mission
Editorial Board
Editorial Staff
Supporters
Contributors
Legal Stuff
Privacy Policy
Kudos
This page updated:
1/7/2007 12:51:00 PM
DoctorFungus - All Rights Reserved
© 2007 Copyright
& Privacy Policy
Site built and designed for doctorfungus by Webillustrated
|
 |
 |
 |
|
You are here:
The Fungi
> Descriptions >
|
|
Microsporum audouinii
(described by Gruby in 1843)
| |
Colonies are slow growing, flat, spreading, dense, with a furlike mat having radiating edges. The color of the colony is grayish white to tannish white and rarely rust. From the reverse, it is salmon pink to peach or rose brown.
Microsporum audouinii produces pectinate hyphae and rare macro- and microconidia. Terminal chlamydoconidia may also be formed which have short, spine-like projections, giving a pointed appearence at the tip. When present, macroconidia are smooth to sparsely echinulate, poorly developed, thick walled and irregularly spindle shaped. Microconidia are also rare and when present, they are unicellular and ovoid to clavate in shape.
In vitro hair perforation test is negative. It grows poorly on rice grains. On BCP-milk solids-glucose agar inoculated with Microsporum audouinii, alkalinization is observed. No special growth factor is required to grow Microsporum audouinii. It differs from Microsporum canis by neither perforating hair nor growing on polished rice grains. Hair or skin infected with Microsporum audouinii gives flourescence under Wood's ultraviolet light.
[1295, 2144, 2202]
PubMed
GenBank
Go back to Microsporum spp.
|

M. audouinii culture, Sabouraud dextrose agar
|
|
|

References
1295. Larone, D. H. 1995. Medically Important Fungi - A Guide to Identification, 3rd ed. ASM Press, Washington, D.C.
2144. St-Germain, G., and R. Summerbell. 1996. Identifying Filamentous Fungi - A Clinical Laboratory Handbook, 1st ed. Star Publishing Company, Belmont, California.
2202. Sutton, D. A., A. W. Fothergill, and M. G. Rinaldi (ed.). 1998. Guide to Clinically Significant Fungi, 1st ed. Williams & Wilkins, Baltimore.
|