The ability of the pathogenic fungus Candida albicans to cause disease requires rapid adaptation to changes in the host environment and to an evolving host immune response. The identification of 'virulence factors' using in vitro characterization of mutant strains has traditionally relied on a common set of phenotypic and biochemical assays (most often performed at 30 degrees C) and the subsequent correlation with their corresponding virulence in mouse models of disease. Utilizing a panel of isogenic mutants for the multifunctional signal-modulating 14-3-3 protein (Bmh1p), we have found that specific mutations affect a variety of different pathways currently associated with virulence, including those involved with the formation of filaments, as well as interaction with host immune cells.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe vacuole has crucial roles in stress resistance and adaptation of the fungal cell. Furthermore, in Candida albicans it has been observed to undergo dramatic expansion during the initiation of hyphal growth, to produce highly "vacuolated" subapical compartments. We hypothesized that these functions may be crucial for survival within the host and tissue-invasive hyphal growth.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFReporter systems are used in Candida albicans in three major experimental areas. These include gene expression, promoter analysis, and protein expression/localization. Heterologous expression in C.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAutophagy is a major cellular process that facilitates the bulk degradation of eukaryotic macromolecules and organelles, through degradation within the lysosomal/vacuole compartment. This has been demonstrated to influence a diverse array of eukaryotic cell functions including adaptation, differentiation and developmental programmes. For example, in Saccharomyces cerevisiae autophagy is required for sporulation and survival of nitrogen starvation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA method for the analysis of Candida albicans gene function, which involves random mutagenesis of the open reading frame, is described. This method is especially suited for the study of essential and multi-functional genes, with several advantages over regulatable promoters more commonly used to study essential gene function. These advantages include expression from the endogenous promoter, which should yield a more appropriate transcript expression and abrogate the need for shifts in carbon or amino acid sources necessary with the use of regulatable promoters.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe opportunistic fungal pathogen Candida albicans has the ability to exploit diverse host environments and can either reside commensally or cause disease. In order to adapt to its new environment it must respond to new physical conditions, nutrient sources, and the host immune response. This requires the co-regulation of multiple signalling networks.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAcute and recurrent vulvovaginal candidiasis (VVC) remains a significant problem in women of childbearing age. While clinical studies of women with recurrent VVC (RVVC) and animal models have provided important data about a limited protective role of adaptive immunity, there remains a paucity of information on the protective mechanisms or factors associated with susceptibility to infection. In the present study, an intravaginal live Candida challenge in healthy adult women showed a differential susceptibility to symptomatic VVC, where 3 (15%) of 19 women with no history of VVC acquired a symptomatic infection compared to 6 (55%) of 11 women with an infrequent history of VVC.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe Candida albicans vacuole has previously been observed to undergo rapid expansion during the emergence of a germ tube from a yeast cell, to occupy the majority of the parent yeast cell. Furthermore, the yeast-to-hypha switch has been implicated in the virulence of this organism. The class C vps (vacuolar protein sorting) mutants of Saccharomyces cerevisiae are defective in multiple protein delivery pathways to the vacuole and prevacuole compartment.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFExpert Opin Ther Targets
October 2002
The occurrence of fungal infection has escalated significantly in recent years and is expected to continue to increase for the foreseeable future. Unfortunately, only a limited number of antifungal drugs are currently available partially due to a lack of suitable targets. The most commonly used antifungals target the same molecule in the cell membrane and, while efficacious, are either extremely toxic or susceptible to resistance.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe 14-3-3 proteins are a family of conserved small acidic proteins that have been implicated in playing major roles in a wide variety of signalling cascades. In Saccharomyces cerevisiae, the 14-3-3 genes (BMH1 and BMH2) are essential for normal pseudohyphal induction and normal bud cell development. The Bmh proteins function in the cAMP-dependent RAS/MAPK and rapamycin-sensitive signalling cascades.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMicrobiology (Reading)
August 1998
A 3.6 kb gene (ELF1) with homology to the ATP-binding cassette (ABC) gene family has been isolated from genomic libraries of Candida albicans. Members of this gene family include both membrane transport proteins which confer a drug-resistance phenotype, and proteins whose functions are associated with protein translation.
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