نتایج جستجو برای: usage of opaque white

تعداد نتایج: 21186113  

2015
Zhiyun Guan Haoping Liu

The human fungal pathogen Candida albicans undergoes white-opaque phenotypic switching, which enhances its adaptation to host niches. Switching is controlled by a transcriptional regulatory network of interlocking feedback loops acting on the transcription of WOR1, the master regulator of white-opaque switching, but regulation of the network on the translational level is not yet explored. Here,...

2016
Song Yi

Candida albicans is the most prevalent human fungal pathogen. The research described in this thesis has focused on the identification and characterization of the regulatory pathways controlling white-opaque switching, mating, biofilm formation and the relationship among them in this pathogen. White-opaque switching and mating in C. albicans are under the repression of the a1-α2 complex. Based o...

Journal: :Cell 2002
Mathew G. Miller Alexander D. Johnson

Discovered over a decade ago, white-opaque switching in the human fungal pathogen Candida albicans is an alternation between two quasistable, heritable transcriptional states. Here, we show that white-opaque switching and sexual mating are both controlled by mating type locus homeodomain proteins and that opaque cells mate approximately 10(6) times more efficiently than do white cells. These re...

2016
Iuliana V. Ene Matthew B. Lohse Adrian V. Vladu Joachim Morschhäuser Alexander D. Johnson Richard J. Bennett

The white-opaque switch is a bistable, epigenetic transition affecting multiple traits in Candida albicans including mating, immunogenicity, and niche specificity. To compare how the two cell states respond to external cues, we examined the fitness, phenotypic switching, and filamentation properties of white cells and opaque cells under 1,440 different conditions at 25°C and 37°C. We demonstrat...

Journal: :Infection and immunity 1989
J Anderson L Cundiff B Schnars M X Gao I Mackenzie D R Soll

Cells of Candida albicans strain WO-1 and related strains switch frequently and reversibly between a white-colony-forming unit (white phase) and a gray-colony-forming unit (opaque phase). Cells in the budding white phase exhibit the usual smooth round phenotype observed in other C. albicans strains, but cells in the budding opaque phase exhibit a unique elongate shape with surface pimples or pr...

2013
Haoyu Si Aaron D. Hernday Matthew P. Hirakawa Alexander D. Johnson Richard J. Bennett

The ability to switch between yeast and filamentous forms is central to Candida albicans biology. The yeast-hyphal transition is implicated in adherence, tissue invasion, biofilm formation, phagocyte escape, and pathogenesis. A second form of morphological plasticity in C. albicans involves epigenetic switching between white and opaque forms, and these two states exhibit marked differences in t...

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 2006
Rebecca E Zordan David J Galgoczy Alexander D Johnson

White-opaque switching in the human fungal pathogen Candida albicans is an alternation between two distinct types of cells, white and opaque. White and opaque cells differ in their appearance under the microscope, the genes they express, their mating behaviors, and the host tissues for which they are best suited. Each state is heritable for many generations, and switching between states occurs ...

2013
Jing Xie Li Tao Clarissa J. Nobile Yaojun Tong Guobo Guan Yuan Sun Chengjun Cao Aaron D. Hernday Alexander D. Johnson Lixin Zhang Feng-Yan Bai Guanghua Huang

Phenotypic transitions play critical roles in host adaptation, virulence, and sexual reproduction in pathogenic fungi. A minority of natural isolates of Candida albicans, which are homozygous at the mating type locus (MTL, a/a or α/α), are known to be able to switch between two distinct cell types: white and opaque. It is puzzling that white-opaque switching has never been observed in the major...

Journal: :PLoS Biology 2007
Rebecca E Zordan Mathew G Miller David J Galgoczy Brian B Tuch Alexander D Johnson

The human pathogen Candida albicans can assume either of two distinct cell types, designated "white" and "opaque." Each cell type is maintained for many generations; switching between them is rare and stochastic, and occurs without any known changes in the nucleotide sequence of the genome. The two cell types differ dramatically in cell shape, colony appearance, mating competence, and virulence...

Journal: :PLoS Pathogens 2008
Bernardo Ramírez-Zavala Oliver Reuß Yang-Nim Park Knut Ohlsen Joachim Morschhäuser

Candida albicans strains that are homozygous at the mating type locus (MTLa or MTLalpha) can spontaneously switch at a low frequency from the normal yeast cell morphology (white) to an elongated cell type (opaque), which is the mating-competent form of the fungus. The ability to switch reversibly between these two cell types also contributes to the pathogenicity of C. albicans, as white and opa...

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