Morphogenesis and Pathogenicity in Fungi

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Infectious fungal diseases continue to take their toll in terms of human suffering and enormous economic losses. Invasive infections by opportunistic fungal pathogens are a major cause of morbidity and mortality in immuno-compromised individuals. At the same time, plant pathogenic fungi have devastating effects on crop production and human health. New strategies for antifungal control are required to meet the challenges posed by these agents, and such approaches can only be developed through the identification of novel biochemical and molecular targets. However, in contrast to bacterial pathogens, fungi display a wealth of “lifestyles” and modes of infection. This diversity makes it extremely difficult to identify individual, evolutionarily conserved virulence determinants and represents a major stumbling block in the search for common antifungal targets. In order to activate the infection programme, all fungal pathogens must undergo appropriate developmental transitions that involve cellular differentiation and the introduction of a new morphogenetic programme. How growth, cell cycle progression and morphogenesis are co-ordinately regulated during development has been an active area of research in fungal model systems such as budding and fission yeast. By contrast, we have only limited knowledge of how these developmental processes shape fungal pathogenicity, or of the role of the cell cycle and morphogenesis regulators as true virulence factors. This book combines state-of-the-art expertise from diverse pathogen model systems to update our current understanding of the regulation of fungal morphogenesis as a key determinant of pathogenicity in fungi.

Author(s): Steven D. Harris (auth.), José Pérez Martín, Antonio Di Pietro (eds.)
Series: Topics in Current Genetics 22
Edition: 1
Publisher: Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg
Year: 2012

Language: English
Pages: 286
Tags: Cell Biology; Biochemistry, general; Fungus Genetics; Developmental Biology; Medical Microbiology

Front Matter....Pages i-xiii
Molecular Basis of Morphogenesis in Fungi....Pages 1-20
Tropic Orientation Responses of Pathogenic Fungi....Pages 21-41
Hyphal Fusion....Pages 43-59
Signaling of Infectious Growth in Fusarium oxysporum ....Pages 61-79
Integrating Cdk Signaling in Candida albicans Environmental Sensing Networks....Pages 81-96
Cell Cycle and Morphogenesis Connections During the Formation of the Infective Filament in Ustilago maydis ....Pages 97-114
Appressorium Function in Colletotrichum orbiculare and Prospect for Genome Based Analysis....Pages 115-131
Morphogenesis in Candida albicans : How to Stay Focused....Pages 133-161
Morphogenesis in Paracoccidioides brasiliensis ....Pages 163-196
Morphogenesis of Cryptococcus neoformans ....Pages 197-223
Morphogenesis and Infection in Botrytis cinerea ....Pages 225-241
Morphogenesis, Growth, and Development of the Grass Symbiont Epichlöe festucae ....Pages 243-264
Cryptococcus–Neutrophil Interaction....Pages 265-280
Back Matter....Pages 281-286