Abstract:
A metabolite-based treatment for Pseudogymnoascus destructans, the causative agent of bat White-nose syndrome, was isolated from a soil fungus native to Eastern Canada.
Three application methods were modelled using media-based assays to determine how the treatment could be applied in situ: an environmentally-applied prophylactic, a topically applied prophylactic, and a topical post-infection treatment. P. destructans growth was
effectively slowed in all three models.
After separation and characterisation, an active molecule in the metabolite-based treatment was determined to be griseofulvin, a known antifungal compound. This compound was tested against P. destructans using the topically-applied prophylactic method and proved to be more potent than the crude metabolite mixture.
To identify the mechanism of action of the metabolite-based treatment, transcriptome analysis was performed on control and treated groups of the target fungus P. destructans and a non-target Pseudogymnoascus species. To date, transcript reads were aligned and quantified. Further differential expression analysis must be completed.