نتایج جستجو برای: als3

تعداد نتایج: 109  

Journal: :Microbiology 2005
Soon-Hwan Oh Georgina Cheng Jennifer A Nuessen Robert Jajko Kathleen M Yeater Xiaomin Zhao Claude Pujol David R Soll Lois L Hoyer

Candida albicans strain SC5314 contains two ALS3 alleles, which differ in sequence with respect to the number of copies of the 108 bp tandem repeat sequence within the central domain of the coding region. One allele (ALS3(12)) has 12 tandem repeat copies while the other (ALS3(9)) has 9 copies. Wild-type C. albicans (ALS3(12)/ALS3(9)) and those containing various ALS3 alleles (ALS3(12)/als3Delta...

Journal: :PLoS Pathogens 2006
Clarissa J Nobile David R Andes Jeniel E Nett Frank J Smith Fu Yue Quynh-Trang Phan John E Edwards Scott G Filler Aaron P Mitchell

The fungal pathogen Candida albicans is frequently associated with catheter-based infections because of its ability to form resilient biofilms. Prior studies have shown that the transcription factor Bcr1 governs biofilm formation in an in vitro catheter model. However, the mechanistic role of the Bcr1 pathway and its relationship to biofilm formation in vivo are unknown. Our studies of biofilm ...

Journal: :Eukaryotic cell 2007
Silvia Argimón Jill A Wishart Roger Leng Susan Macaskill Abigail Mavor Thomas Alexandris Susan Nicholls Andrew W Knight Brice Enjalbert Richard Walmsley Frank C Odds Neil A R Gow Alistair J P Brown

Candida albicans expresses specific virulence traits that promote disease establishment and progression. These traits include morphological transitions between yeast and hyphal growth forms that are thought to contribute to dissemination and invasion and cell surface adhesins that promote attachment to the host. Here, we describe the regulation of the adhesin gene ALS3, which is expressed speci...

Journal: :Microbiology 2015
Caroline V Bamford Angela H Nobbs Michele E Barbour Richard J Lamont Howard F Jenkinson

The opportunistic pathogen Candida albicans colonizes the oral cavity and gastrointestinal tract. Adherence to host cells, extracellular matrix and salivary glycoproteins that coat oral surfaces, including prostheses, is an important prerequisite for colonization. In addition, interactions of C. albicans with commensal oral streptococci are suggested to promote retention and persistence of fung...

Journal: :Microbiology 2004
Xiaomin Zhao Soon-Hwan Oh Georgina Cheng Clayton B Green Jennifer A Nuessen Kathleen Yeater Roger P Leng Alistair J P Brown Lois L Hoyer

The ALS (agglutinin-like sequence) gene family of Candida albicans encodes eight cell-surface glycoproteins, some of which are involved in adherence to host surfaces. A mutational analysis of each ALS gene is currently being performed to deduce the functions of the encoded proteins and to better understand the role of these proteins in C. albicans biology and pathogenesis. This paper describes ...

Journal: :Current Biology 2008
Clarissa J. Nobile Heather A. Schneider Jeniel E. Nett Donald C. Sheppard Scott G. Filler David R. Andes Aaron P. Mitchell

BACKGROUND Biofilms are surface-associated microbial communities with significant environmental and medical impact. Here, we focus on an adherence mechanism that permits biofilm formation by Candida albicans, the major invasive fungal pathogen of humans. RESULTS The Als surface-protein family has been implicated in biofilm formation, and we show that Als1 and Als3 have critical but redundant ...

Journal: :Infection and immunity 2005
Clayton B Green Xiaomin Zhao Lois L Hoyer

Candida albicans PALS-green fluorescent protein (GFP) reporter strains were inoculated into mice in a disseminated candidiasis model, and GFP production was monitored by immunohistochemistry and reverse transcription-PCR (RT-PCR). GFP production from the ALS1 and ALS3 promoters was detected immunohistochemically. ALS1, ALS2, ALS3, ALS4, and ALS9 transcription was detected by RT-PCR, further ide...

Journal: :Iranian biomedical journal 2012
Maryam Moazeni Mohammad Reza Khorramizadeh Ladan Teimoori-Toolabi Fatemeh Noorbakhsh Ali Akbar Fallahi Sassan Rezaie

BACKGROUND The most important virulence factor which plays a central role in Candida albicans pathogenesis is the ability of this yeast to alternate between unicellular yeast and filamentous hyphal forms. Efg1 protein is thought to be the main positive regulating transcription factor, which is responsible for regulating hyphal-specific gene expression under most conditions. ALS3 is one of the E...

Journal: :PLoS Biology 2007
Quynh T Phan Carter L Myers Yue Fu Donald C Sheppard Michael R Yeaman William H Welch Ashraf S Ibrahim John E Edwards Scott G Filler

Candida albicans is the most common cause of hematogenously disseminated and oropharyngeal candidiasis. Both of these diseases are characterized by fungal invasion of host cells. Previously, we have found that C. albicans hyphae invade endothelial cells and oral epithelial cells in vitro by inducing their own endocytosis. Therefore, we set out to identify the fungal surface protein and host cel...

Ali Akbar Fallahi, Fatemeh Noorbakhsh, Ladan Teimoori-Toolabi , Maryam Moazeni, Mohammad Reza Khorramizadeh, Sassan Rezaie,

Background: The most important virulence factor which plays a central role in Candida albicans pathogenesis is the ability of this yeast to alternate between unicellular yeast and filamentous hyphal forms. Efg1 protein is thought to be the main positive regulating transcription factor, which is responsible for regulating hyphal-specific gene expression under most conditions. ALS3 is one of the ...

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