Cladophialophora is known as a mitosporic dematiaceous or pigmented
mold. Rotten plant material and soil are its natural habitats.
Some species will be predominant in subtropical and tropical
regions.
Cladophialophora Species:
The Cladophialophora genus includes Cladophialophora bantiana,
Cladophialophora carrioinii, Cladophialophora boppii, Cladophialophora
devriesii and Cladophialophora arxii.

Clinical Significance and Pathogenicity:
Cladophialophora spp. is known as causative agents of chromoblastomycosis,
mycetoma and phaeohyphomycosis. Cladophialophora bantiana
is a neurotropic fungus and will cause cerebral phaehyphomycosis,
which will apprear in the brain as abscesses. Clinical course
for this problem is usually fatal. It can also cause the lesions
on skin. While Cladophialophora carrioinii and Cladophialophora
boppii are isolated from the patients with chromoblastomycosis,
boppii may also cause the skin lesions. Exposure and trauma
to the soil are the main predisposing aspects for acquiring
the infections because of Cladophialophora carrioinii. The
Cladophialophora bantiana is mostly acquired through inhalation.
Alternatively, Cladophialophora devriesii has been known to
cause the disseminated phaehyphomycosis.
Macroscopic Features:
Textures of the Cladophialophora colonies are powdery to woolly
as well as spreading. Usually, the color will be olivaceous
green to black from front. From reverse, it appears in black
color. Cladophialophora bantiana and Cladophialophora boppi
will grow rapidly on the potato dextrose agar even at 25°C.
Growth of the Cladophialophora carrionii will be slow under
the same settings. As Cladophialophora bantiana are capable
of growing at high temperature as 42-43°C, the Cladophialophora
carrionii will not grow at a temperatures beyond 35-36°C.
Cladophialophora spp will also produce septate, unicellular
conidia and brown hyphae. Cladophialophora boppi and Cladophialophora
bantiana may also create chlamydoconidia. The Conidiophores
of the Cladophialophora are not differentiated from vegetative
hyphae. The conidia will be in pale or dark brown and they
frequently form the chains. The youngest conidium will be
situated at the top of the chain, symptomatic of an acropetal
conidium formation.
Cladophialophora bantiana will also produce long chains of
smooth, unicellular, lemon-shaped conidia, which will be of
6-11x2.5-5 µm in size. There will be no shield cells
on the conidiophore, which will support the formation. Cladophialophora
boppi will produce unbranched and very long chains of round
conidia that are of 2-3x3-4 µm in size. There are no
shield cells observed and the conidia will directly appear
from the conidiophores. The Cladophialophora carrionii will
also produce long, abundantly unicellular, branching, lemon-shaped
conidia that are smooth or occasionally echinulate.
Histopathologic Features:
Cladosporium are different from Cladophialophora as it has
conidia with brown colored scars. While the Cladophialophora
bantiana is capable of growing at 42-43°C, carrionii and
many species of the Cladosporium will not grow at the temperatures
above 35°C.
Unlike Cladophialophora spp., the Fonsecaea spp. produces
short chains, which will have less than five conidia.
Laboratory Precautions:
The Cladophialophora bantiana is considered as an extremely
dangerous fungus, which should be worked only in biological
safety cabinet. Cladophialophora carrionii must also be handled
with very much care in a closed and safe biological cabinet.
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