Search results for "Phenotypic switching"

showing 6 items of 6 documents

Phenotypic Heterogeneity of the Insect Pathogen Photorhabdus luminescens: Insights into the Fate of Secondary Cells

2019

Photorhabdus luminescens is a Gram-negative bacterium that lives in symbiosis with soil nematodes and is simultaneously highly pathogenic toward insects. The bacteria exist in two phenotypically different forms, designated primary (1°) and secondary (2°) cells. Yet unknown environmental stimuli as well as global stress conditions induce phenotypic switching of up to 50% of 1° cells to 2° cells. An important difference between the two phenotypic forms is that 2° cells are unable to live in symbiosis with nematodes and are therefore believed to remain in the soil after a successful infection cycle. In this work, we performed a transcriptomic analysis to highlight and better understand the rol…

InsectaPhenotypic switchingCellMothsBiologyApplied Microbiology and BiotechnologyTranscriptome03 medical and health sciencesBacterial ProteinsPhotorhabdus luminescensEnvironmental MicrobiologymedicineAnimalsSymbiosisGene030304 developmental biology0303 health sciencesRhizosphereEcology030306 microbiologyGene Expression ProfilingComputational BiologyChemotaxisbiology.organism_classificationPhenotypeCell biologyPhenotypemedicine.anatomical_structureLarvaRhizosphereBiological AssayPhotorhabdusFood ScienceBiotechnologyApplied and Environmental Microbiology
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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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Regulation of Phenotypic Switching and Heterogeneity in Photorhabdus luminescens Cell Populations.

2019

Phenotypic heterogeneity in bacterial cell populations allows genetically identical organisms to different behavior under similar environmental conditions. The Gram-negative bacterium Photorhabdus luminescens is an excellent organism to study phenotypic heterogeneity since their life cycle involves a symbiotic interaction with soil nematodes as well as a pathogenic association with insect larvae. Phenotypic heterogeneity is highly distinct in P. luminescens. The bacteria exist in two phenotypic forms that differ in various morphologic and phenotypic traits and are therefore distinguished as primary (1°) and secondary (2°) cells. The 1 cells are bioluminescent, pigmented, produce several sec…

Phenotypic switchingBacterial Physiological Phenomena03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineSymbiosisBacterial ProteinsStructural BiologyPhotorhabdus luminescensSymbiosisMolecular BiologyOrganism030304 developmental biologyGenetics0303 health sciencesLife Cycle StagesbiologyGenetic heterogeneityPigmentationQuorum SensingPhenotypic traitGene Expression Regulation Bacterialbiology.organism_classificationPhenotypeNematodePhenotypeBiological Variation PopulationPhotorhabdus030217 neurology & neurosurgeryJournal of molecular biology
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Depletion of polyubiquitin encoded by the UBI4 gene confers pleiotropic phenotype to Candida albicans cells.

2003

We have studied the roles of polyubiquitin in Candida albicans physiology. Heterologous expression of the C. albicans polyubiquitin (UBI4) gene in a ubi4 Saccharomyces cerevisiae strain suppressed the mutant phenotype (hypersensitivity to heat shock). A heterozygous strain UBI4/Deltaubi4::hisG, obtained following the ura-blaster procedure, was used to construct a conditional mutant using a pCaDis derivative plasmid. By serendipity we isolated the UBI4 conditional mutant as well as a UBI4 mutant containing a non-functional MET3 promoter. Depletion of polyubiquitin conferred pleiotropic effects to mutant cells: (i) a limited increased sensitivity to mild heat shock; (ii) increased formation o…

Saccharomyces cerevisiae ProteinsbiologyPhenotypic switchingMutantHyphaebiology.organism_classificationCell morphologyMicrobiologyMolecular biologyCorpus albicansPhenotypeTransformation GeneticCandida albicansGeneticsMorphogenesisUbiquitin CHeterologous expressionHeat shockCloning MolecularUbiquitin CCandida albicansPolyubiquitinPromoter Regions GeneticGene DeletionHeat-Shock ResponseFungal genetics and biology : FGB
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The genotypes and virulence attributes of C. albicans isolates from oral leukoplakia

2021

Background There is a debate as to whether some types of oral leucoplakias (OL) are caused by Candida species, and whether they contribute to the malignant transformation, associated with a minority of such lesions. As no detailed population analysis of yeast isolates from OL is available, we evaluated the virulence attributes, and genotypes of 35 C. albicans from OL, and compared their genotypes with 18 oral isolates from healthy individuals. Material and Methods The virulence traits evaluated were esterase, phospholipase, proteinase, haemolysin and coagulase production, and phenotypic switching activity, and yeast adherence and biofilm formation. DNA from OL and control yeasts were evalua…

audio-visual resourcesGenotypePopulationPhenotypic switchingVirulenceBiologyEsterasepatient educationMicrobiologyGenotypeCandida albicansHumanseducationGeneral DentistryUNESCO:CIENCIAS MÉDICASCandidaeducation.field_of_studyOral Medicine and PathologyVirulenceResearchHemolysinoral cancerdiagnostic delayspanishCorpus albicansOtorhinolaryngologySurgeryinternetCoagulaseLeukoplakia OralMedicina Oral, Patología Oral y Cirugía Bucal
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Wall mannoproteins in cells from colonial phenotypic variants of Candida albicans.

1990

Candida albicans ATCC 26555 switched at high frequency (10(-1) to 10(-3)) between several phenotypes identified by colony morphology on a defined mineral amino-acid-containing agar medium supplemented with arginine and zinc (LAZ medium). When cells taken from colonies exhibiting distinct morphologies were plated directly onto LAZ agar, spontaneous conversion to all the variant phenotypes occurred at combined frequencies of 2.1 x 10(-1) to 9.5 x 10(-3). However, when cells taken from the different colonial phenotypes were plated directly onto an undefined medium (yeast extract/peptone/dextrose; YPD medium), or first incubated in liquid YPD medium and then cloned on YPD agar, all colonies obs…

food.ingredientHydrolasesPhenotypic switchingMicrobiologyMicrobiologyAgar plateCell wallFungal Proteinschemistry.chemical_compoundfoodCell WallCandida albicansConcanavalin AAgarCandida albicansAntiserumGrowth mediumMembrane GlycoproteinsbiologyTemperaturebiology.organism_classificationYeastCulture MediaPhenotypechemistryElectrophoresis Polyacrylamide GelJournal of general microbiology
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