Literature DB >> 16003938

Iron gathering of opportunistic pathogenic fungi. A mini review.

Ildikó Nyilasi1, T Papp, M Takó, Erzsébet Nagy, Cs Vágvölgyi.   

Abstract

Iron is an essential nutrient for most organisms because it serves as a catalytic cofactor in oxidation-reduction reactions. Iron is rather unavailable because it occurs in its insoluble ferric form in oxides and hydroxides, while in serum of mammalian hosts is highly bound to carrier proteins such as transferrin, so the free iron concentration is extremely low insufficient for microbial growth. Therefore, many organisms have developed different iron-scavenging systems for solubilizing ferric iron and transporting it into cells across the fungal membrane. There are three major mechanisms by which fungi can obtain iron from the host: (a) utilization of a high affinity iron permease to transport iron intracellularly, (b) production and secretion of low molecular weight iron-specific chelators (siderophores), (c) utilization of a hem oxygenase to acquire iron from hemin. Patients with elevated levels of available serum iron treated with iron chelator, deferoxamine to remedy iron overload conditions have an increased susceptibility of invasive zygomycosis. Presumably deferoxamine predisposes patients to Zygomycetes infections by acting as a siderophore]. The frequency of zygomycosis is increasing in recent years and these infections respond very poorly to currently available antifungal agents, so new approaches to develop strategies to prevent and treat zygomycosis are urgently needed. Siderophores and iron-transport proteins have been suggested to function as virulence factors because the acquisition of iron is a crucial pathogenetic event. Biosynthesis and uptake of siderophores represent possible targets for antifungal therapy.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 16003938     DOI: 10.1556/AMicr.52.2005.2.4

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Acta Microbiol Immunol Hung        ISSN: 1217-8950            Impact factor:   2.048


  5 in total

1.  Ferric ion (hydr)oxo clusters in the "Venus flytrap" cleft of FbpA: Mössbauer, calorimetric and mass spectrometric studies.

Authors:  Arindam Mukherjee; Paul R Bilton; Logan Mackay; Adam Janoschka; Haizhong Zhu; Dean Rea; Pat R R Langridge-Smith; Dominic J Campopiano; Thomas Teschner; Alfred X Trautwein; Volker Schünemann; Peter J Sadler
Journal:  J Biol Inorg Chem       Date:  2012-02-17       Impact factor: 3.358

2.  Candida albicans ferric reductases are differentially regulated in response to distinct forms of iron limitation by the Rim101 and CBF transcription factors.

Authors:  Yong-Un Baek; Mingchun Li; Dana A Davis
Journal:  Eukaryot Cell       Date:  2008-05-23

3.  Wider access to genotypic space facilitates loss of cooperation in a bacterial mutator.

Authors:  Freya Harrison; Angus Buckling
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2011-02-25       Impact factor: 3.240

4.  Role of Iron Chelators in Mucormycosis.

Authors:  Vidya Mahalmani; Phulen Sarma; Ajay Prakash; Bikash Medhi
Journal:  Indian J Pharmacol       Date:  2021 Jul-Aug       Impact factor: 1.200

Review 5.  Novel Regulatory Mechanisms of Pathogenicity and Virulence to Combat MDR in Candida albicans.

Authors:  Saif Hameed; Zeeshan Fatima
Journal:  Int J Microbiol       Date:  2013-09-16
  5 in total

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