نتایج جستجو برای: efg1 gene

تعداد نتایج: 1141425  

2014
Li Tao Han Du Guobo Guan Yu Dai Clarissa J. Nobile Weihong Liang Chengjun Cao Qiuyu Zhang Jin Zhong Guanghua Huang

Non-genetic phenotypic variations play a critical role in the adaption to environmental changes in microbial organisms. Candida albicans, a major human fungal pathogen, can switch between several morphological phenotypes. This ability is critical for its commensal lifestyle and for its ability to cause infections. Here, we report the discovery of a novel morphological form in C. albicans, refer...

Journal: :Cell 1997
Hsiu-Jung Lo Julia R Köhler Beth DiDomenico David Loebenberg Anthony Cacciapuoti Gerald R Fink

Candida albicans and Saccharomyces cerevisiae switch from a yeast to a filamentous form. In Saccharomyces, this switch is controlled by two regulatory proteins, Ste12p and Phd1p. Single-mutant strains, ste12/ste12 or phd1/phd1, are partially defective, whereas the ste12/ste12 phd1/phd1 double mutant is completely defective in filamentous growth and is noninvasive. The equivalent cph1/cph1 efg1/...

2010
M. M. Harriott E. A. Lilly T. E. Rodriguez P. L. Fidel M. C. Noverr

Current understanding of resistance and susceptibility to vulvovaginal candidiasis challenges existing paradigms of host defence against fungal infection. While abiotic biofilm formation has a clearly established role during systemic Candida infections, it is not known whether C. albicans forms biofilms on the vaginal mucosa and the possible role of biofilms in disease. In vivo and ex vivo muri...

2016
Carol A Woolford Katherine Lagree Wenjie Xu Tatyana Aleynikov Hema Adhikari Hiram Sanchez Paul J Cullen Frederick Lanni David R Andes Aaron P Mitchell

Biofilm formation on implanted medical devices is a major source of lethal invasive infection by Candida albicans. Filamentous growth of this fungus is tied to biofilm formation because many filamentation-associated genes are required for surface adherence. Cell cycle or cell growth defects can induce filamentation, but we have limited information about the coupling between filamentation and fi...

Journal: :Infection and immunity 2002
Peter Staib Marianne Kretschmar Thomas Nichterlein Herbert Hof Joachim Morschhäuser

The opportunistic fungal pathogen Candida albicans can cause superficial as well as systemic infections. Successful adaptation to the different host niches encountered during infection requires coordinated expression of various virulence traits, including the switch between yeast and hyphal growth forms and secretion of aspartic proteinases. Using an in vivo expression technology that is based ...

2013
M. Staniszewska M. Bondaryk E. Swoboda-Kopec K. Siennicka G. Sygitowicz W. Kurzatkowski

Scanning electron microscope (SEM) observations were used to analyze particular morphologies of Candida albicans clinical isolate (strain 82) and mutants defective in hyphae-promoting genes EFG1 (strain HLC52) and/or CPH1 (strains HLC54 and Can16). Transcription factors Efg1 and Cph1 play role in regulating filamentation and adhesion of C. albicans' morphologies. Comparative analysis of such mu...

Journal: :Infection and immunity 2009
Suman Ghosh Dhammika H M L P Navarathna David D Roberts Jake T Cooper Audrey L Atkin Thomas M Petro Kenneth W Nickerson

The opportunistic fungal pathogen Candida albicans is a part of the normal flora but it also causes systemic candidiasis if it reaches the bloodstream. Upon being phagocytized by macrophages, an important component of innate immunity, C. albicans rapidly upregulates a set of arginine biosynthetic genes. Arginine, urea, and CO2 induced hyphae in a density-dependent manner in wild-type, cph1/cph1...

Journal: :PLoS Biology 2007
Kira O'Day

2100 Imagine identical twin sisters, one short, dark-haired, and zaftig; the other tall, blond, and willowy. You’re not likely to run across this pair, since identical twins possess matching genomes and thus, when raised under the same conditions, look alike. But some organisms, like the fungus Candida albicans, can assume dramatically different, heritable forms even though they share identical...

2016
Junko Yano Alika Yu Paul L. Fidel Mairi C. Noverr

Denture stomatitis (DS) is characterized by inflammation of the oral mucosa in direct contact with dentures and affects a significant number of otherwise healthy denture wearers. The disease is caused by Candida albicans, which readily colonizes and form biofilms on denture materials. While evidence for biofilms on abiotic and biotic surfaces initiating Candida infections is accumulating, a rol...

Journal: :PLoS Biology 2007
Rebecca E Zordan Mathew G Miller David J Galgoczy Brian B Tuch Alexander D Johnson

The human pathogen Candida albicans can assume either of two distinct cell types, designated "white" and "opaque." Each cell type is maintained for many generations; switching between them is rare and stochastic, and occurs without any known changes in the nucleotide sequence of the genome. The two cell types differ dramatically in cell shape, colony appearance, mating competence, and virulence...

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