Search results for "FUNGAL"

showing 10 items of 1116 documents

Soft X-ray tomography of phenotypic switching and the cellular response to antifungal peptoids in Candida albicans.

2009

The opportunistic pathogen Candida albicans can undergo phenotypic switching between a benign, unicellular phenotype and an invasive, multicellular form that causes candidiasis. Increasingly, strains of Candida are becoming resistant to antifungal drugs, making the treatment of candidiasis difficult, especially in immunocompromised or critically ill patients. Consequently, there is a pressing need to develop new drugs that circumvent fungal drug-resistance mechanisms. In this work we used soft X-ray tomography to image the subcellular changes that occur as a consequence of both phenotypic switching and of treating C. albicans with antifungal peptoids, a class of candidate therapeutics unaf…

MultidisciplinaryAntifungal AgentsPhenotypic switchingHyphaeVirulencePeptoidDrug resistanceBiologyBiological Sciencesbiology.organism_classificationPhenotypeCorpus albicansMicrobiologychemistry.chemical_compoundPeptoidsPhenotypechemistryDrug Resistance FungalOrganelleCandida albicansCandida albicansProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
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2015

In eukaryotes, wobble uridines in the anticodons of tRNALysUUU, tRNAGluUUC and tRNAGlnUUG are modified to 5-methoxy-carbonyl-methyl-2-thio-uridine (mcm5s2U). While mutations in subunits of the Elongator complex (Elp1-Elp6), which disable mcm5 side chain formation, or removal of components of the thiolation pathway (Ncs2/Ncs6, Urm1, Uba4) are individually tolerated, the combination of both modification defects has been reported to have lethal effects on Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Contrary to such absolute requirement of mcm5s2U for viability, we demonstrate here that in the S. cerevisiae S288C-derived background, both pathways can be simultaneously inactivated, resulting in combined loss of t…

MultidisciplinarybiologySpeed wobbleSaccharomyces cerevisiaeFungal geneticsRNAbiology.organism_classificationDNA-binding proteinUridineELP3Cell biologychemistry.chemical_compoundBiochemistrychemistryTransfer RNAPLOS ONE
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UNCLES: Method for the identification of genes differentially consistently co-expressed in a specific subset of datasets

2015

Background Collective analysis of the increasingly emerging gene expression datasets are required. The recently proposed binarisation of consensus partition matrices (Bi-CoPaM) method can combine clustering results from multiple datasets to identify the subsets of genes which are consistently co-expressed in all of the provided datasets in a tuneable manner. However, results validation and parameter setting are issues that complicate the design of such methods. Moreover, although it is a common practice to test methods by application to synthetic datasets, the mathematical models used to synthesise such datasets are usually based on approximations which may not always be sufficiently repres…

Multiple datasets analysisMethodology ArticleGene Expression ProfilingCell CycleGenes FungalBi-CoPaMSaccharomyces cerevisiaeConsistent co-expressionBiochemistryComputer Science ApplicationsComputingMethodologies_PATTERNRECOGNITIONGenome-wide analysisUNCLESCluster AnalysisGenome FungalMolecular BiologyOligonucleotide Array Sequence Analysis
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The Candida albicans pH-regulated KER1 gene encodes a lysine/glutamic-acid-rich plasma-membrane protein that is involved in cell aggregation.

2004

Immunoscreening of aCandida albicanscDNA library with a polyclonal germ-tube-specific antibody (pAb anti-gt) resulted in the isolation of a gene encoding a lysine/glutamic-acid-rich protein, which was consequently designatedKER1. The nucleotide and deduced amino acid sequences of this gene displayed no significant homology with any other known sequence.KER1encodes a 134 kDa lysine (14·5 %)/glutamic acid (16·7 %) protein (Ker1p) that contains two potential transmembrane segments.KER1was expressed in a pH-conditional manner, with maximal expression at alkaline pH and lower expression at pH 4·0, and was regulated byRIM101. A Δker1/Δker1null mutant grew normally but was hyperflocculant under ge…

MutantLysineGenes FungalMolecular Sequence DataGlutamic AcidMicrobiologyFungal ProteinsMiceImmunoscreeningComplementary DNAGene Expression Regulation FungalCandida albicansAnimalsCloning MolecularCandida albicansDNA Fungalchemistry.chemical_classificationbiologyBase SequenceVirulenceLysineMembrane ProteinsHydrogen-Ion Concentrationbiology.organism_classificationMolecular biologyTransmembrane proteinAmino acidPhenotypechemistryBiochemistryPolyclonal antibodiesMice Inbred DBAbiology.proteinGene DeletionSubcellular FractionsMicrobiology (Reading, England)
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Killer-toxin-resistant kre12 mutants of Saccharomyces cerevisiae: genetic and biochemical evidence for a secondary K1 membrane receptor.

1995

The Saccharomyces cerevisiae killer toxin K1 is a secreted alpha/beta-heterodimeric protein toxin that kills sensitive yeast cells in a receptor-mediated two-stage process. The first step involves toxin binding to beta-1,6-D-glucan-components of the outer yeast cell surface; this step is blocked in yeast mutants bearing nuclear mutations in any of the KRE genes whose products are involved in synthesis and/or assembly of cell wall beta-D-glucans. After binding to the yeast cell wall, the killer toxin is transferred to the cytoplasmic membrane, subsequently leading to cell death by forming lethal ion channels. In an attempt to identify a secondary K1 toxin receptor at the plasma membrane leve…

MutantSaccharomyces cerevisiaeGenes FungalReceptors Cell SurfaceSaccharomyces cerevisiaeSpheroplastsBiologymedicine.disease_causeBiochemistryMicrobiologyModels BiologicalIon ChannelsFungal ProteinsCell surface receptorCell WallGeneticsmedicineMolecular BiologyDiphtheria toxinToxinMembrane ProteinsDrug Resistance MicrobialGeneral MedicineSpheroplastMycotoxinsbiology.organism_classificationYeastKiller Factors YeastBiochemistryMembrane proteinMutationArchives of microbiology
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Interactions of fungi with other organisms.

2013

Living organisms establish complex networks of mutualistic and antagonistic interactions in nature, which impact strongly on their own survival and on the stability of the whole population. Fungi, in particular, can shape natural as well as man-managed ecosystems due to their ubiquitous occurrence and the range of interactions they establish with plants, animals and other microbes. This review describes some examples of mutualistic and antagonistic fungal interactions that are of particular interest for their ecological role, or because they can be exploited by man to improve plant health and/or productivity in sustainable agriculture and forestry.

Mutualism (biology)education.field_of_studyEcologyfungal interactionsPopulationfungifood and beveragesPlant ScienceBiologybiocontrol fungi; fungal interactionsmycorrhizal fungiMycorrhizal fungiSustainable agricultureSettore BIO/03 - Botanica Ambientale E ApplicataBiocontrol fungi fungal interactions mycorrhizal fungiEcosystemBiocontrol fungieducationEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematics
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Mycochemicals in wild and cultivated mushrooms: nutrition and health

2021

AbstractThe mushrooms have contributed to the development of active ingredients of fundamental importance in the field of pharmaceutical chemistry as well as of important tools in human and animal health, nutrition, and functional food. This review considers studies on the beneficial effects of medicinal mushrooms on the nutrition and health of humans and farm animals. An overview of the chemical structure and composition of mycochemicals is presented in this review with particular reference to phenolic compounds, triterpenoids and sterols, fatty acids and lipids, polysaccharides, proteins, peptides, and lectins. The nutritional value and chemical composition of wild and cultivated mushroom…

Mycochemical0106 biological sciencesCultivationPlant Science01 natural sciencesFungal diversity Cultivation Mycochemicals Chemical structures Nutrition0404 agricultural biotechnologyNutraceuticalTriterpenoidChemical structureFunctional food010608 biotechnologyFood scienceFungal diversityBeneficial effectsNutritionPleurotusAnimal healthbiologyMycochemicals04 agricultural and veterinary sciencesbiology.organism_classification040401 food scienceChemical structuresnervous systemFungal diversity; Cultivation; Mycochemicals; Chemical structures; NutritionSettore BIO/03 - Botanica Ambientale E Applicatapsychological phenomena and processesBiotechnologyPhytochemistry Reviews
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Polyphasic identification of yeasts isolated from bark of cork oak during the manufacturing process of cork stoppers.

2003

A two-step protocol was used for the identification of 52 yeasts isolated from bark of cork oak at initial stages of the manufacturing process of cork stoppers. The first step in the identification was the separation of the isolates into groups by their physiological properties and RFLPs of the ITS-5.8S rRNA gene. The second step was the sequencing of the D1/D2 domains of the 26S rRNA gene of selected isolates representing the different groups. The results revealed a predominance of basidiomycetous yeasts (11 species), while only two species represented the ascomycetous yeasts. Among the basidiomycetous yeasts, members representing the species Rhodosporidium kratochvilovae and Rhodotorula n…

MycologyCorkengineering.materialRhodotorulaApplied Microbiology and BiotechnologyMicrobiologyDNA RibosomalPolymerase Chain ReactionRhodotorula mucilaginosaQuercusYeastsDebaryomyces hanseniiBotanyTrichosporon mucoidesDNA FungalMycological Typing TechniquesRibosomal DNAbiologyBase SequenceFungal geneticsGeneral Medicinebiology.organism_classificationPhenotypevisual_artvisual_art.visual_art_mediumengineeringPlant BarkBarkPolymorphism Restriction Fragment LengthFEMS yeast research
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The Impact of NFAT Inhibition on Neutrophil Antifungal Defense and Myelopoiesis in Cyclosporine A Treated and NFATc1LysM Mice

2015

Abstract Background and Aims: Immunodeficient patients after allogeneic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) are heavily threatened by opportunistic fungal infections like invasive pulmonary aspergillosis (IPA), partly due to immunosuppressive medication e.g. by calcineurin inhibitors like cyclosporine A (CsA) or tacrolimus. It is well known that the nuclear factor of activated T cells (NFAT) is an important transcription factor downstream of calcineurin in the adaptive immune system especially in T cells. Additionally, there is a growing body of evidence that NFAT also plays a substantial role in innate immune response against invasive fungal diseases by polymorphonuclear neutrophils (PMN), as…

MyeloidImmunologyNFATCell BiologyHematologyBiologyBiochemistryTransplantationmedicine.anatomical_structureImmune systemImmunologyAntifungal innate immune responsemedicineBone marrowMyelopoiesisProgenitor cellBlood
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Composition and in vitro antifungal activity of essential oils of Erigeron canadensis and Myrtus communis from France. CHEMISTRY OF NATURAL COMPOUNDS…

2003

Myrtus communis Erigeron canadensis essential oils antifungal activity
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