Publications by authors named "A Sanchez-Reyes"

and are opportunistic pathogens affecting mostly immunocompromised hosts. Both species have emerged as causes of invasive candidiasis and sepsis respectively. Here we present high-quality long-read genome assemblies for a strain of isolated from human breast milk, with multiple predicted signatures consistent with Candida Drug Resistance CDR1/CDR2 and Multi Drug Resistance MDR1-type genes, also for an environmental strain of with multiresistance to azole antifungals.

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Inferring evolutionary relationships among organisms has been a fundamental problem in evolutionary biology. The current phylogenetic molecular methods serve as the baseline model to test new evolutionary hypotheses with taxonomic purposes. Leishmaniinae trypanosomatids subfamily includes protozoan parasites of clinical importance to humans.

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Exophiala is a black fungi of the family Herpotrichiellaceae that can be found in a wide range of environments like soil, water and the human body as potential opportunistic pathogen. Some species are known to be extremophiles, thriving in harsh conditions such as deserts, glaciers, and polluted habitats. The identification of novel Exophiala species across diverse environments underlines the remarkable biodiversity within the genus.

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Four Gram-positive, aerobic, catalase- and oxidase-negative, rod-shaped, motile endophytic bacterial strains, designated NM3R9, NE1TT3, NE2TL11 and NE2HP2, were isolated from the inner tissues (leaf and stem) of and roots of . They were characterized using a polyphasic approach, which revealed that they represent two novel species. Phylogenetic analysis based on 16S rRNA gene sequencing showed that the species closest to NE2HP2 was DSM 20754 (99.

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