Publications by authors named "Hunter Gage"

Article Synopsis
  • Canonical sexual reproduction in basidiomycete fungi usually involves the fusion of two haploid individuals, resulting in a genetically diverse mycelial body, but some mushrooms, like Amanita phalloides, can reproduce without mating.
  • Population genomics reveal that both homokaryotic (single nucleus) and heterokaryotic (multiple nuclei) mushrooms coexist in California, indicating that the nuclei of homokaryotic mushrooms can contribute to outcrossing.
  • The study shows that death cap mushrooms have a unique mating type control and can reproduce both alone and with others, enabling their rapid spread in new environments over the past 17 to 30 years.
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Malaria is a devastating disease caused by parasites. The evolution of parasite drug resistance continues to hamper progress toward malaria elimination, and despite extensive efforts to control malaria, it remains a leading cause of death in Mozambique and other countries in the region. The development of successful vaccines and identification of molecular markers to track drug efficacy are essential for managing the disease burden.

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Canonical sexual reproduction among basidiomycete fungi involves the fusion of two haploid individuals of different sexes, resulting in a heterokaryotic mycelial body made up of genetically different nuclei . Using population genomics data, we discovered mushrooms of the deadly invasive are also homokaryotic, evidence of sexual reproduction by single individuals. In California, genotypes of homokaryotic mushrooms are also found in heterokaryotic mushrooms, implying nuclei of homokaryotic mycelia also promote outcrossing.

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Background: The Plasmodium genus of malaria parasites encodes several families of antigen-encoding genes. These genes tend to be hyper-variable, highly recombinogenic and variantly expressed. The best-characterized family is the var genes, exclusively found in the Laveranian subgenus of malaria parasites infecting humans and great apes.

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