Sexual reproduction provides natural selection and adaptation of the organisms to environmental conditions by allowing benefical mutations to spread and by diluting deleterious mutations. In recent years new findings which indicate the role of sexual reproduction in fungal pathogenicity, have been obtained. However, the pathogenic fungi limit their sexual cycles to generate clonal populations instead of recombinants, to enable themselves to adapt to the new conditions in the environment and in the host such as antimicrobial therapy. Cryptococcus neoformans being a haploid organism has a laboratory diagnosed sexual cycle and mating cell types "a and alpha". Nutrient limitation stimulates production of pheromones that induce cell-cell fusion and the resulting dikaryon undergoes filamentous transition, karyogamy and meiosis in basidia and chains of very infective basidiospores develop. The "a" and "alpha" alleles take place in MAT (Mating Type) locus. Strains of "alpha" mating-type predominate in environment and clinical isolates and, in "a-alpha" coinfection model, alpha-cells exhibit more pathogenic behaviour than congenic "a" cells. In the most common pathogenic variety grubii, (serotype A) there is no difference in the virulence of cells of opposite mating types but, during co-infection alpha-cells more easily cross the blood-brain barrier. Additionally, alpha strains produce increased amounts of melanin and urease which enhance invasion of central nervous system. In C. neoformans a novel sexual cycle named as same-sex (monokaryotic) mating has been discovered. Alpha-alpha cells engage in sex without an "a" partner that can contribute to generate diversity and produce infectious haploid basidiospores. This process is also called as "parasexual" recombination. Another aspect for C. neoformans biological property is naturally occuring AD hybrid strains between var. grubii (serotype A) and var. neoformans (serotype D) via sexual crosses. Those strains often contain both mating types, either aADalpha or alphaADa. In Candida albicans due to its diploid property, most strains are a/alpha heterozygous at the mating-type locus and contain both mating-type alleles. Thus, the tetraploid cells (a/a/alpha/alpha) generated during mating can turn to diploid state (a/a and alpha/alpha) by random chromosome loss via parasexual process but without meiosis, within the host. Tetraploids were found to be less virulent in murine infections and could be cleared more rapidly than the diploids. In C. albicans, control of white-opaque switching is believed to be regulated in part by the mating locus, suggesting switch may be involved in mating. Like these 2 opportunistic pathogens, in Pneumocystis jiroveci, Histoplasma capsulatum and Aspergillus spp. genetic studies are being carried out to identify genes related to mating types, sexual cycle, virulence and resistance to antifungal drugs, and the interactions between them.
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Development
January 2025
School of Biomedical Sciences, The University of Queensland, Brisbane, Queensland 4072, Australia.
A successful mitosis-to-meiosis transition in germ cells is essential for fertility in sexually reproducing organisms. In mice and humans, it is established that expression of STRA8 is critical for meiotic onset in both sexes. Here we show that BMP signalling is also essential, not for STRA8 induction but for correct meiotic progression in female mouse fetal germ cells.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Exp Biol
January 2025
Sorbonne Université, Université Paris-Est Créteil, INRAE, CNRS, IRD, Institute for Ecology and Environmental Sciences of Paris, iEES Paris, F-75005, Paris, France.
As in other animals, insects can modulate their odor-guided behaviors, especially sexual behavior, according to environmental and physiological factors such as the individual's nutritional state. This behavioral flexibility results from modifications of the olfactory pathways under the control of hormones. Most studies have focused on the central modulation of the olfactory system and less attention has been paid to the peripheral olfactory system.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFR Soc Open Sci
January 2025
Department of Anthropology, Stony Brook University, Stony Brook, NY, USA.
Across mammals, fertility and offspring survival are often lowest at the beginning and end of females' reproductive careers. However, extrinsic drivers of reproductive success-including infanticide by males-could stochastically obscure these expected age-related trends. Here, we modelled reproductive ageing trajectories in two cercopithecine primates that experience high rates of male infanticide: the chacma baboon () and the gelada ().
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Rep
January 2025
Grupo de Ecología de Poblaciones de Insectos, Instituto de Investigaciones Forestales y Agropecuarias Bariloche (IFAB) (CONICET - INTA), Modesta Victoria N°4450, San Carlos de Bariloche, Río Negro, 8400, Argentina.
During the mating season, reproductive individuals of numerous insect species gather in rendezvous areas, which increases mating opportunities. Male hymenopterans often have to move considerable distances during a particular season, searching or waiting for receptive females. Such behavior is likely driven by a complex combination of individual and species-specific traits, environmental influence, and landscape cues.
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January 2025
Department of Botany and Evolutionary Ecology, University of Warmia and Mazury in Olsztyn, Plac Łódzki 1, 10‑727, Olsztyn, Poland.
The liverwort Arnellia fennica has a circumarctic distribution with disjunct and scarce localities in the Alps, Carpathians, and Pyrenees. Within the Carpathians, it is only known from the Tatra Mountains (in Poland), where so far only four occurrences have been documented in the forest belt of the limestone part of the Western Tatras. The species is considered a tertiary relict, which owes its survival during the last glaciation period to low-lying locations in areas not covered by ice.
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