Literature DB >> 30669554

The 'Amoeboid Predator-Fungal Animal Virulence' Hypothesis.

Arturo Casadevall1, Man Shun Fu2, Allan J Guimaraes3, Patricia Albuquerque4.   

Abstract

The observation that some aspects of amoeba-fungal interactions resemble animal phagocytic cell-fungal interactions, together with the finding that amoeba passage can enhance the virulence of some pathogenic fungi, has stimulated interest in the amoeba as a model system for the study of fungal virulence. Amoeba provide a relatively easy and cheap model system where multiple variables can be controlled for the study of fungi-protozoal (amoeba) interactions. Consequently, there have been significant efforts to study fungal⁻amoeba interactions in the laboratory, which have already provided new insights into the origin of fungal virulence as well as suggested new avenues for experimentation. In this essay we review the available literature, which highlights the varied nature of amoeba-fungal interactions and suggests some unsolved questions that are potential areas for future investigation. Overall, results from multiple independent groups support the 'amoeboid predator⁻fungal animal virulence hypothesis', which posits that fungal cell predation by amoeba can select for traits that also function during animal infection to promote their survival and thus contribute to virulence.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Cryptococcus; amoeba; aspergillus; fungi; pathogenicity; virulence

Year:  2019        PMID: 30669554      PMCID: PMC6463022          DOI: 10.3390/jof5010010

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Fungi (Basel)        ISSN: 2309-608X


1. Introduction

Fungi are major pathogens of plants, insects and ectothermic vertebrates but there are relatively few that are able to cause disease in mammals. The remarkable resistance of mammals to fungal diseases is attributed to a combination of endothermy, which creates a thermal restriction zone for survival of most fungal species and adaptive immunity [1,2,3]. However, that still leaves unresolved the question of how the capacity for virulence emerged in soil microbes that have no need for an animal host for survival or replication. This question is particularly relevant since for most pathogenic fungi there is no human-to-human transmission and thus it is unlikely that their virulence traits emerged from animal selection [4]. In 2001 a comparative analysis of the replication of Cryptococcus neoformans in macrophages and the free-living amoeba Acanthamoeba castellani revealed remarkable similarities leading to the proposal that its capacity for virulence emerged accidentally from selection by amoeboid predators in soils [5]. Subsequent work extended this concept to other pathogenic fungal species such as Aspergillus spp., Histoplasma capsulatum, Blastomyces dermatitides, Sporothrix schenkii, Cryptococcus gattii and entomogenous fungi [6,7,8,9]. Amoeba have putative mannose receptors that allow them to recognize this sugar in fungal surfaces [10,11]. In the past two decades, the concept that amoeba serve as selection mechanism leading to the emergence of virulence in different microbes has gained credence [12,13,14] and amoeba have emerged as a major model system for the study of the evolution of virulence in many types of microorganisms, including fungi [15]. The nature of amoeba, which includes food acquisition by phagocytosis and the fact that the fungi spend most of their life cycle in soil corroborates this hypothesis. Besides, macrophages and amoeba have similar mechanisms of phagocytosis and prey inactivation [16]. In fact, the connection between food acquisition by phagocytic cells and host defense may be ancient and it has been proposed that the digestive and immune systems of Metazoa share a common origin in deep time [17]. In this essay, we review the literature on interactions between fungal virulence and amoeba and discuss the state of the hypothesis that amoeboid predators select for the capacity of animal virulence in soil fungi. For readers interested in this subject, we note other recent reviews on the topic [18,19,20].

2. Early Studies on the Interaction of Fungi and Amoeba

The interaction of amoeba with animal pathogenic fungi has been studied for decades. In 1931, Castellani reported an amoeba growing in cultures of a Cryptococcus spp. [21], providing an early report of fungal–amoeba interactions whereby the amoeba appear to lyse the yeast cells. In 1955, A. castellanii was shown to feed on C. neoformans [22] and subsequently demonstrated to feed on cultures of Torula famata and Candida parapsilosis [23]. Interestingly, this early study reported that growth on the yeast C. parapsilosis was much faster than growth on the filamentous T. famata since the protozoa had difficulty ingesting hyphae [23]. Beginning in the late 1970s, Bulmer and colleagues carried out studies of the interaction of C. neoformans with amoeba and established that the protozoa preyed and devoured encapsulated cells with the emergence of hyphal cells as resistant forms, which were hypovirulent in mice [24,25]. Furthermore, this group with their colleagues reported that amoeba were biotic control factors for C. neoformans in the environment [26], establishing an ecological correlate of relevance for laboratory observations involving fungal and protozoal cells. In other studies, A. castellanii was shown to rapidly kill cultures of S. cerevisiae, reducing more than half of the fungal cells after 90 min of co-incubation [27]. The focus of this review is on animal pathogenic fungi with particular emphasis on those that cause disease in mammals, but we note that other investigators have also explored the interaction of soil amoeba with other groups of soil fungi, including yeast and filamentous fungi acting in nature as saprophytes, entomopathogens and even as phytopathogens [28,29,30,31,32]. Although the observations also reveal a great number of different outcomes for those interactions, in general yeast cells were more prone to be ingested and killed by soil amoeba in comparison to hyphae. Esser and colleagues reported that pigmented conidia of plant pathogens Alternaria, Curvularia, Helminthosporium were internalized by Thecamoeba spp. and later egested in a viable condition, in a closer resemblance of nonlytic exocytosis [29]. Despite that, there are groups of amoebae, such as giant amoebae from the Vampyrellid family that have developed efficient strategies to attack and kill fungal spores by perforation [31]. The early studies established that amoeba could prey on animal pathogenic fungi, that there were differences in the fungal resistance to amoeba predation, and that different morphological forms of certain fungal species manifested differences in their resistance to protozoal ingestion.

3. Correspondence of Virulence Factors for Animals and Amoeba

3.1. C. neoformans

Among the animal pathogenic fungus C. neoformans is the most extensively studied species with regards to interactions with protozoa (Figure 1 and Figure 2). C. neoformans has several well defined virulence factors for animals that have been evaluated for their need in fungal survival against amoeba predation. The capsule, melanin synthesis and phospholipase have each been shown to be important for C. neoformans to resist predation by A. castellanii [5]. These virulence factors appear to have similar functions in protecting C. neoformans against both host defense mechanisms and amoeba predation. For example, the polysaccharide capsule interferes with phagocytosis by both macrophage and A. castellanii [33]. However, not every virulence determinant is relevant in both animals and protozoa. C. neoformans alpha mating locus strains are more virulent in mice than congenic ‘a’ mating locus strains but there was no difference in the survival of fungal cells of different mating types when confronted by amoeba [34]. Similarly, urease has been shown to be important for C. neoformans virulence in mice [35] but comparison of urease positive and deficient strains revealed no difference for survival with amoeba [36]. Mannitol production by C. neoformans is associated with pleiotropic effects on virulence but how this relates to its role in the environment is unknown [37,38,39]. The absence of one-to-one correspondence with regards to virulence factor importance in protozoa and Animalia is not surprising given that the phenomenon of virulence in metazoan hosts is much more complicated by the existence of organ systems and immune systems that can impart host damage when they respond to infection. For example, the major role for urease in the environment appears to be nutrient acquisition, but in the mammalian host this enzyme affects brain invasion [40,41], as well as the macrophage response to infection by virtue of its ability to alkaline the local environment through the generation of ammonia [36]. There is also increasing evidence that host damage in animal cryptococcosis is the result of immune-mediated damage [42,43,44], which implies that antigens irrelevant to surviving in the environment could contribute to virulence simply by eliciting malevolent immune responses.
Figure 1

Interaction of C. neoformans (blue) with Acanthamoeba castellanii. The amoeba are much larger than the fungal cells and readily ingest them. The amoeba in the top middle center has ingested a fungal cell. For details of the conditions in this experiment see [45]. Briefly, A. castellanii and C. neoformans cells were incubated in a 8-well-chambered cover glass. Fungal cells appear blue because theys were stained with 0.01% Uvitex 2B prior to co-incubation. Images were taken using a DAPI (4′,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole) filter-equipped Zeiss Axiovert 200M inverted microscope with 20× phase objective.

Figure 2

Scheme of known and possible interactions of C. neoformans with amoeba based on the experience with Acanthamoeba castellanii. The outcome of the interaction is highly variable and determined by such variables as the nutritional state of amoeba and the presence of metal cations in the media [45,46]. Question marks are added to processes for which there is uncertainty and/or that have not been demonstrated experimentally.

In addition to the correspondence between animal and amoeba survival for selected fungal cells expressing certain virulence factors, there are also remarkable similarities in several cellular processes. C. neoformans responds to both amoeba and macrophages by enlarging its polysaccharide capsule, in what appears to be a protective stress response [47]. The capsular response is triggered by phospholipids that are presumably released from amoeba and macrophages by the action of cryptococcal enzymes, including phospholipase B [47]. The process for this mechanism envisions the release of enzymes by C. neoformans into its immediate environment that damage macrophage or protozoal cell membranes, producing polar phospholipids that are sensed by the fungal cell [47]. Hence, enzyme release followed by phospholipid sensing may be an early warning system in the environment that alerts the fungal cell that an amoeboid predator is in the environment. The occurrence of a similar process during infection would explain why residence in any particular host is associated with capsular enlargement, which in turn would protect against macrophage phagocytosis and killing. Incidentally, the process of phospholipid-mediated capsular enlargement can trigger the phenomena of giant (Titan) cell formation, with the emergence of enormous fungal cells [47], incapable of being engulfed. The phenomenon of C. neoformans non-lytic exocytosis (vomocytosis), a process discovered in macrophages [48,49], was subsequently observed to also occur with A. castellanii [50] and D. discoideum [51], providing another parallel between mammalian and protozoal cells that could represents an escape mechanism to exit predatory cells. At the cellular level exocytosis from both macrophages and slime mold cells have been shown to rely on actin polymerization driven by similar cellular machinery [52]. Another interesting parallel involves the release of fungal extracellular vesicles [53], which have been shown to affect macrophage function [54] and to interfere with amoeba metabolism [55]. C. neoformans cells produce 3-hydroxy fatty acids, which inhibit amoeba phagocytosis and could have a similar role during infection for macrophages [56]. More direct evidence for the ability of amoeba to affect C. neoformans virulence comes from passage experiments of an attenuated cryptococcal strain with D. discoideum, which showed a rapid increase in virulence [57]. This work also illustrated how the phenomenon of increased microbial virulence in setting of impaired hosts applied at the cellular level, since a D. discoideum mutant defective in myosin VII synthesis was susceptible to a highly attenuated acapsular C. neoformans strain [57]. Another protozoa that can prey on C. neoformans are Paramecium spp, which readily ingested and killed cryptococcal cells [58].

3.2. Aspergillus spp.

Like C. neoformans, there is circumstantial evidence that amoeba and Aspergillus spp. interact in the environment. Analysis of the environmental microflora in moisture-damaged buildings revealed the co-habitation of molds and amoeba [59]. Laboratory studies of amoeba and molds isolated from moisture-damaged buildings suggested that Aspergillus spp. benefitted from the presence of the protozoa while amoeba were indifferent to the presence of molds [60]. In parallel to the experience with C. neoformans, the interaction of Aspergillus fumigatus conidia with A. castellanii was found to have remarkable similarities to their interactions with avian macrophages [8]. In addition to that, the interaction of A. fumigatus with another amoeba, Vermamoeba (Hartmannella) vermiformis, promoted fungal filamentation and growth of and the major reduction of amoeba viability, while in the same conditions the interaction of this fungus with A. castellanii had no influence in fungal growth [61]. The authors also found that amoeba supernatants were able to increase germination and fungal growth. According to them the release of amoeba metabolites that can be used as nutrients by fungal cells might contribute to fungal persistence. Analysis of the interaction of A. fumigatus with the social amoeba D. discoideum revealed concordance between virulence factors for animals and those needed for fungal survival and killing of amoeba [62]. Specifically, gliotoxin was found to be important for killing D. discoideum thus linking the production of mycotoxins to predator control and fungal environmental survival [62]. Another mycotoxin fumagillin was shown to inhibit the growth of Entamoeba histolytica [63], and on the other hand, contribute to epithelial cell damage by allowing fungal invasion [64]. Substances from spores of Aspergillus spp. have been shown to have toxic effects on Naegleria gruberi and to mediate anti-phagocytic effects on human neutrophils and macrophages [65,66]. Aspergillus spp. DHN melanin, which inhibits phagolysosomal acidification also in macrophages interferes with phagocytosis by amoeba, suggesting that this virulence determinant has different functions for fungal cell survival with confronted by animal and protozoal phagocytic cells [67].

3.3. Candida spp.

Relatively little work has been done to explore amoeba-Candida spp. interactions. Although commensal Candida spp. limited to mammalian hosts would not be expected to be under predation by ameba in soils, there are some body sites that are co-inhabited by fungal and protozoal cells where they could potentially interact. For example, amoeba are present in the human oral cavity [68] where Candida spp. are also commonly found in a commensal state. Steenbergen et al. reported that A. castellanii preyed on C. albicans and efficiently reduced colony-forming units consistent with fungal killing [5]. In another work, the free soil amoeba V. vermiformis was shown to be able to internalize yeast cells of C. albicans, C. glabrata and C. parapsilosis and promote their proliferation in tap water with or without saliva traces [69]. Recently the interaction of Candida spp. and S. cerevisiae with D. discoideum and other non-axenic social amoeba was studied, including mutant strains of both the fungal and protozoal spp. [70]. This study reported that the outcome of the fungal–amoeba interaction could be altered by mutations in either party providing a system for the studying the effect of fungal and amoeba genes in determining which eukaryotic cells maintain ascendancy in the confrontation [70].

3.4. Other Pathogenic Fungi

One study has investigated the interaction of B. dermatitides, H. capsulatum and S. schenkii (Figure 3) with A. castellanii and reported that each of these fungal species was able to grow in the presence of the amoeba [6]. The interaction of Fusarium spp. with amoeba is of interest given that both are involved in corneal infections. Amoeba have been proposed to be major biotic control factors for Fusarium oxysporum in soils [71]. Given that amoeba could be important contaminants of contact lens cleaning solutions, there could be situations when these two organisms interact in vivo [72,73]. Incubation of Fusarium with two different types of amoeba, A. castellanii and V. vermiformis, showed that although fungal cells were ingested the interaction resulted in enhanced fungal growth [74]. Moreover, there is evidence that the interaction of Fusarium spp. with A. castellanii can enhance the virulence of both organisms [73]. Indeed, severe keratitis caused by dual infection with Fusarium spp. and A. castellanii has been reported with the suggestion that this condition should be suspected in situations of refractory infection [75].
Figure 3

Acanthamoeba castellanii interaction with yeasts of Sporothrix brasiliensis. The white arrows depict the acanthapodes as projections from the A. castellanii surface in close contact with the fungal cell wall outer layer.

4. Amoeba and Fungal Dimorphism

An emerging theme in amoeba-fungal studies is that hyphal forms are more resistant to protozoal predation than yeast forms. This was noted as early as 1964 when Nero et al. reported that a mold was more resistant to amoeba than Candida parapsilosis [23]. Similarly, Bulmer et al. noted amoeba predation of C. neoformans lawns resulted in the emergence of pseudohyphal forms, which were resistant to amoeba but less virulent in mice [25]. Analysis of pseudohyphal strains showed a hypermutation locus in the RAM signaling pathway [76], suggesting that emergence of such forms in experiments involving amoeba predation could reflect mutations in this pathway. Incubation of B. dermatitides, H. capsulatum and S. schenkii yeast cells with A. castellani at 37 °C led to the rapid emergence of filamentous forms for each fungal species even at a temperature where the yeast form is preferred [6]. Recently, incubation of A. fumigatus conidia with the free living amoeba V. vermiformis was reported to promote fungal filamentation and growth [61]. C. albicans forms hyphae inside or outside D. discoideum, but no hyphae formation without amoeba [70]. Comparison of phagocytosis of C. neoformans hyphae, pseudohyphae and yeast forms showed that the elongated forms were resistant to phagocytosis by both macrophages and amoeba [77]. However, C. neoformans cells with hyphal and pseudohyphal morphology were much less virulent in mice and moths, indicating that resistance to one host may be associated with vulnerability in another [76]. The differences in susceptibility between yeast and hyphal forms raises the question of whether amoeba predation has been a contributing factor in the evolutionary emergence of fungal dimorphism. In this regard, the emergence of hyphal forms of C. neoformans during amoeba predation of cryptococcal lawns in agar was considered an ‘escape hatch’ for the survival of some cells [78].

5. Considerations, Caveats and Unsolved Questions

5.1. Insights Drawn Primarily from a Few Amoeba and Fungal Species

Most of the studies of fungal–amoeba interactions have been conducted with A. castellanii grown in axenic media. Amoeba that have been selected in laboratory conditions to grow in axenic conditions may exhibit very different physiology than wild amoeba. In general, amoeba recovered from the environment do not grow in culture conditions and thus are difficult to use for fungal–amoeba interaction studies. Given the tremendous variety of amoeba in the environment, the reliance on A. castellanii in laboratory studies raises the concern that insights gained with this protozoal species may not be representative of most fungal–amoeba interactions in nature. Similarly, the relatively few studies of fungal interactions with D. discoideum have also been done with laboratory strains. Hence, the limitations of current systems and the paucity of amoeba strains that have been examined suggest caution in extrapolating laboratory results from environmental conditions. One potential resource to overcome this problem could be the studies of fungal pathogens with mycophagous amoeba. Both A. castellanii and D. discoideum have been shown to be more adapted to have bacterial cells as food sources. Although we can find a few studies about the interaction of amoeba species that in nature feed primarily on fungal cells, there is a general lack of knowledge of the interaction of mycophagous amoeba with animal fungal pathogens [79,80]. One line of fungal–amoeba interaction still neglected is the potential of amoeba working as Trojan horses for animal fungal infections, as may occur with other intracellular pathogens. Considering the number of fungal species that are able to not only survive but also replicate inside soil amoeba, there is the possibility of these soil organisms work as vectors for some fungal infections.

5.2. Ascendancy in Fungal–Amoeba Interactions

Which entity prevails in fungal–amoeba confrontations is highly dependent on the experimental parameters. As evident from the review of the available literature, fungi prevailed in some studies while amoeba were ascendant in others. Clearly, there are major differences in the ability of individual fungal species to resist amoeba predation, a finding that dates to early studies [23]. In this regard, C. neoformans and other pathogenic fungi with environmental habitats were reported to be more resistant to A. castellanii than C. albicans or laboratory adapted S. cerevisiae strains [5,6]. There are also differences between amoeba species in their predatory capacity. Hence, who wins in fungal–amoeba confrontations is highly dependent on the identity of the players involved. There is also evidence that the experimental conditions can benefit either the fungi or amoeba. For example, confrontations of C. neoformans with A. castellanii in phosphate buffered saline result in fungal growth while confrontations in amoeba media result in fungal predation with reduction of cryptococcal colony-forming units [46]. Although this result was initially interpreted as implying that amoeba in a better nutritional state would be stronger predators for C. neoformans, recent findings suggest that the enhanced protozoal activity could have resulted from divalent cations amoeba media. In this regard, the presence of Ca2+ and Mg2+ have strong effects in potentiating A. castellanii antifungal activity [45], suggesting that differences in soil cation concentrations could affect the relative predatory activity abundance of fungi and amoeba.

5.3. Animal Pathogenic Fungi–Amoeba Interactions in Context

Although from our anthropomorphic vantage point we tend to focus on animal and human pathogenic fungi, it is important to note that this is a minute part of fungal interactions with other hosts ranging from those with Protista, Plantae and Animalia. Indirect evidence for the longstanding nature of amoeba-fungal interactions comes from the finding that higher fungi synthesize lectins that are toxic to amoeba, a finding consistent with the development of inducible fungal anti-protozoal defense mechanism [81]. There is a large number of fungal species that parasitize amoeba known as amoebophagous fungi, which are poorly understood because it is difficult to study them outside of the parasitic lifestyle [82]. The impact of such amoebophagous fungi on Protista evolution and their consequences for interactions of amoeba with other fungi are unclear. Similarly, interactions of amoeba with the mycorrhizosphere represent very different ecological spaces for the selection of amoeba and fungal traits to survive their interactions [83]. The point here is that conclusions drawn from observations made in controlled interactions of fungi and amoeba in the laboratory need to acknowledge the limitations inherent in their simplicity relative to vast complexity of protozoal–fungal interactions in the biosphere.

5.4. Fungal–Amoeba Interaction and Susceptibility to Antifungals

Due to the enormous genetic variety of the community of microorganisms in the soil, each possesses a unique combination of characteristics and distinct attributes to avoid the action of phagocytic predators, such as chemical defenses, including the expression of capsule in Cryptococcus sp. and mechanisms for iron acquisition and biofilm formation in Candida spp. Once adapted to the intracellular environment of amoebas, these pathogens could also be protected from the action of biocides and environmentally harsh conditions, making their survival and dissemination more effective. Therefore, the expression of these fungal virulence traits should be also considered in the extent to which amoeba predation could influence susceptibility to antifungal drugs. In this regard, passage of fungi from sites inhabited by birds in amoeba reduced their susceptibility to amphotericin B [84]. Although the mechanism for this effect is uncertain it is possible that adaptation to amoeba is associated with metabolic changes that reduce susceptibility to polyenes, highlighting how tangential interactions in the environment can reverberate into findings of medical importance. For example, the antibody binding to the capsule of C. neoformans triggers transcriptional changes to lipid genes that affect the susceptibility to antifungal agents [85]. In a similar vein, the reduced susceptibility to amphotericin b following interactions with amoeba can be an incidental result of a new metabolic state triggered by protozoa-fungal interactions.

6. A Restatement of the Amoeboid Predator—Animal Virulence Hypothesis

The idea that animal pathogenic fungi acquired many of their characteristics for virulence from interactions with soil protozoal is almost two decades old [5]. The origin of virulence for the entomopathogenic fungi Metarhizium anisopliae and Beauveria bassiana has also been proposed to involve interactions with soil amoeba selected for traits that allow survival in insect hemophytes, which are host phagocytic defensive cells [9]. Despite its increasing acceptance and application to other pathogenic fungi, this hypothesis has not been named. Here we propose to call the process the ‘amoeboid predator-animal virulence’ hypothesis in a phrase that captures the basics of this idea. The amoeboid predator-animal virulence hypothesis posits that constant amoeboid predation over eons selected for fungal traits that also facilitate survival in certain animal hosts and thus confer on those fungal species the capacity for virulence. According to this view such virulence factors in C. neoformans as the polysaccharide capsule, melanin synthesis and phospholipase production have protective roles in the environment that are equally adapted to protection against macrophages during animal infection [5] (Figure 4). For Aspergillus spp., melanin and mycotoxins tripacidin, gliotoxin and fumagillin serve similar functions during its interaction with amoeba and macrophages [18]. Although one cannot expect on-to-one correspondence in function for virulence factors with host cells that diverged eons ago what is most salient is the overall similarities for the survival and cytotoxic processes involved in these fungal cell–amoeba interactions.
Figure 4

Summary of described virulence factors for three major fungal pathogens, in the context of their importance in the interaction with macrophage (pink), amoeba (yellow) or both (orange). For both Cryptococcus and Aspergillus spp. Several attributes have described that are important for both fungal cell survival in both amoeba and macrophages (orange box, center). For C. albicans comparable studies in amoeba have not been undertaken. Question marks denote uncertainty about traits specific to either macrophages or amoeba.

A central feature of the amoeboid predator-animal virulence hypothesis is that it posits that the capacity for virulence can emerge independent of the final host. The phenomenon was termed ‘accidental virulence’ in prior essays [86]. The notion that interactions with amoeba select for traits that enhance resistance against host defense cells has now been extended to several pathogenic microbes including mycobacteria [87] and numerous other microorganisms [12,20,88,89]. One question that emerges from the amoeboid predator-animal virulence hypothesis is why only a small minority of soil microbes have the capacity for animal virulence when all are presumably being selected by amoeboid predators. One possible answer is that the capacity for virulence is a complex phenotype that requires more traits than are needed for survival in soils and, as such, is found only in a rare microbial species. This view was put forth as a metaphorical situation where microbes each had some ‘cards’ that in certain combinations conferred the capacity for virulence in some situations but not others [90]. For example, the ability to cause disease in warm-blooded hosts would require thermotolerance, the capacity to survive at higher temperatures. Another explanation could include the notion that among the soil survival strategies available, some are more suitable for conferring the capacity of virulence for animal hosts. In this regard a comparison of the anti-phagocytic ability of Cryptococcus spp., each of which have capsules, found that the capsule of C. neoformans was the most effective in protecting fungal cells against macrophages [91]. Alternatively, for some microbes the strategies used for defense against environmental predators may be totally different from those needed to survive in animal hosts, which may cause a fitness trade-off and result in a decrease in pathogenicity. We also need to consider that mammals comprise only a small fraction of any environmental niche and that a focus on traits that promote survival in mammals could miss many other attributes of virulence that were selected by fungal interaction with soil predators that are more suitable to interact with many other potential hosts.
  23 in total

Review 1.  Polymicrobial interactions involving fungi and their importance for the environment and in human disease.

Authors:  Seham Z Azzam; Ginelle J Cayme; Luis R Martinez
Journal:  Microb Pathog       Date:  2019-12-24       Impact factor: 3.738

Review 2.  Sensing the threat posed by Aspergillus infection.

Authors:  Joshua J Obar
Journal:  Curr Opin Microbiol       Date:  2020-09-06       Impact factor: 7.934

3.  Transcriptional Control of the Production of Aspergillus fumigatus Conidia-Borne Secondary Metabolite Fumiquinazoline C Important for Phagocytosis Protection.

Authors:  Marina Campos Rocha; João Henrique Tadini Marilhano Fabri; Lilian Pereira Silva; Célio Fernando Figueiredo Angolini; Maria Célia Bertolini; Anderson Ferreira da Cunha; Vito Valiante; Gustavo Henrique Goldman; Taicia Pacheco Fill; Iran Malavazi
Journal:  Genetics       Date:  2021-05-17       Impact factor: 4.402

Review 4.  Pathogen and host genetics underpinning cryptococcal disease.

Authors:  Carolina Coelho; Rhys A Farrer
Journal:  Adv Genet       Date:  2020-03-18       Impact factor: 3.880

5.  Conidial Melanin of the Human-Pathogenic Fungus Aspergillus fumigatus Disrupts Cell Autonomous Defenses in Amoebae.

Authors:  Iuliia Ferling; Joe Dan Dunn; Alexander Ferling; Thierry Soldati; Falk Hillmann
Journal:  mBio       Date:  2020-05-26       Impact factor: 7.867

6.  Current Status and Trends in Alternative Models to Study Fungal Pathogens.

Authors:  Juliana Campos Junqueira; Eleftherios Mylonakis
Journal:  J Fungi (Basel)       Date:  2019-01-26

Review 7.  Benefits and Costs of Animal Virulence for Microbes.

Authors:  Arturo Casadevall; Liise-Anne Pirofski
Journal:  mBio       Date:  2019-06-04       Impact factor: 7.867

8.  On the Emergence of Cryptococcus gattii in the Pacific Northwest: Ballast Tanks, Tsunamis, and Black Swans.

Authors:  David M Engelthaler; Arturo Casadevall
Journal:  mBio       Date:  2019-10-01       Impact factor: 7.867

Review 9.  The Consequences of Our Changing Environment on Life Threatening and Debilitating Fungal Diseases in Humans.

Authors:  Norman van Rhijn; Michael Bromley
Journal:  J Fungi (Basel)       Date:  2021-05-07

10.  A hidden battle in the dirt: Soil amoebae interactions with Paracoccidioides spp.

Authors:  Patrícia Albuquerque; André Moraes Nicola; Diogo Almeida Gomes Magnabosco; Lorena da Silveira Derengowski; Luana Soares Crisóstomo; Luciano Costa Gomes Xavier; Stefânia de Oliveira Frazão; Fernanda Guilhelmelli; Marco Antônio de Oliveira; Jhones do Nascimento Dias; Fabián Andrés Hurtado; Marcus de Melo Teixeira; Allan Jefferson Guimarães; Hugo Costa Paes; Eduardo Bagagli; Maria Sueli Soares Felipe; Arturo Casadevall; Ildinete Silva-Pereira
Journal:  PLoS Negl Trop Dis       Date:  2019-10-07
View more

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.