2 resultados para Candida albicans -- immunology

em CORA - Cork Open Research Archive - University College Cork - Ireland


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Fungal pathogen Candida albicans causes serious nosocomial infections in patients, in part, due to formation of drug-resistant biofilms. Protein kinases (PK) and transcription factors (TF) mediate signal transduction and transcription of proteins involved in biofilm development. To discover biofilm-related PKs, a collection of 63 C. albicans PK mutants was screened twice independently with microtiter plate-based biofilm assay (XTT). Thirty-eight (60%) mutants showed different degrees of biofilm impairment with the poor biofilm formers additionally possessing filamentation defects. Most of these genes were already known to encode proteins associated with Candida morphology and biofilms but VPS15, PKH3, PGA43, IME2 and CEX1, were firstly associated with both processes in this study. Previous studies of Holcombe et al. (2010) had shown that bacterial pathogen, Pseudomonas aeruginosa can impair C. albicans filamentation and biofilm development. To investigate their interaction, the good biofilm former PK mutants of C. albicans were assessed for their response to P. aeruginosa supernatants derived from two strains, wildtype PAO1 and homoserine lactone (HSL)-free mutant ΔQS, without finding any nonresponsive mutants. This suggested that none of the PKs in this study was implicated in Candida-Pseudomonas signaling. To screen promoter sequences for overrepresented TFs across C. albicans gene sets significantly up/downregulated in presence of bacterial supernatants from Holcombe et al. (2010) study, TFbsST database was created online. The TFbsST database integrates experimentally verified TFs of Candida to analyse promoter sequences for TF binding sites. In silico studies predicted that Efg1p was overrepresented in C. albicans and C. parapsilosis RBT family genes.

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Cell-to-cell signals of the Diffusible Signal Factor (DSF) family are cis-2-unsaturated fatty acids of differing chain length and branching pattern. DSF signalling has been described in diverse bacteria to include plant and human pathogens where it acts to regulate functions such as biofilm formation, antibiotic tolerance and the production of virulence factors. DSF family signals can also participate in interspecies signalling with other bacteria and interkingdom signaling such as with the yeast Candida albicans. Interference with DSF signalling may afford new opportunities for the control of bacterial disease. Such strategies will depend in part on detailed knowledge of the molecular mechanisms underlying the processes of signal synthesis, perception and turnover. Here, I review both recent progress in understanding DSF signalling at the molecular level and prospects for translating this knowledge into approaches for disease control.