Keyword search (4,163 papers available)

"growth" Keyword-tagged Publications:

Title Authors PubMed ID
1 Trajectories of Alcohol-Related Problems Among First-Year Nursing Students: Nature, Predictors, and Outcomes Cheyroux P; Morin AJS; O' Connor RM; Colombat P; Vancappel A; Eltanoukhi R; Gillet N; 41797206
PSYCHOLOGY
2 Proposing Targets and Limits to Urban Sprawl: How Likely are Current Greenbelt Scenarios for Montreal to Achieve Proposed Reference Values by 2070? Mosharafian S; Jaeger JAG; 41436679
CONCORDIA
3 Ingestion of polyethylene microplastics impacts cichlid behaviour despite having low retention time Felismino MEL; Chevallier Rufigny S; Gonzalez-Fleurant SE; Brown GE; 39862685
BIOLOGY
4 Developmental heterogeneity of school burnout across the transition from upper secondary school to higher education: A 9-year follow-up study Nadon L; Morin AJS; Gilbert W; Olivier E; Salmela-Aro K; 39645324
PSYCHOLOGY
5 Urban sprawl in Canada: Values in all 33 Census Metropolitan Areas and corresponding 469 Census Subdivisions between 1991 and 2011 Pourali M; Townsend C; Kross A; Guindon A; Jaeger JAG; 35242923
LIBRARY
6 Binary Cu2-xS Templates Direct the Formation of Quaternary Cu2ZnSnS4 (Kesterite, Wurtzite) Nanocrystals Yarur Villanueva F; Green PB; Qiu C; Ullah SR; Buenviaje K; Howe JY; Majewski MB; Wilson MWB; 34705409
CNSR
7 Creating doorways: finding meaning and growth through art therapy in the face of life-threatening illness Reilly RC; Lee V; Laux K; Robitaille A; 34487868
CONCORDIA
8 The effect of classroom aggression-related peer group norms on students' short-term trajectories of aggression Velásquez AM; Saldarriaga LM; Castellanos M; Bukowski WM; 34302295
PSYCHOLOGY
9 Genetic Characterization of Mutations Related to Conidiophore Stalk Length Development in Aspergillus niger Laboratory Strain N402 Demirci E; Arentshorst M; Yilmaz B; Swinkels A; Reid ID; Visser J; Tsang A; Ram AFJ; 33959152
CSFG
10 Identifying potential drug targets and candidate drugs for COVID-19: biological networks and structural modeling approaches Selvaraj G; Kaliamurthi S; Peslherbe GH; Wei DQ; 33968364
CERMM
11 Loss of Arp1, a putative actin-related protein, triggers filamentous and invasive growth and impairs pathogenicity in Candida albicans. Yao S, Feng Y, Islam A, Shrivastava M, Gu H, Lu Y, Sheng J, Whiteway M, Feng J 33363697
BIOLOGY
12 Income inequality and social gradients in children's height: a comparison of cohort studies from five high-income countries. Bird PK, Pickett KE, Graham H, Faresjö T, Jaddoe VWV, Ludvigsson J, Raat H, Seguin L, Wijtzes AI, McGrath JJ 31909223
PSYCHOLOGY
13 Population variation in density-dependent growth, mortality and their trade-off in a stream fish. Matte JM, Fraser DJ, Grant JWA 31642512
BIOLOGY
14 Lithocholic bile acid accumulated in yeast mitochondria orchestrates a development of an anti-aging cellular pattern by causing age-related changes in cellular proteome. Beach A, Richard VR, Bourque S, Boukh-Viner T, Kyryakov P, Gomez-Perez A, Arlia-Ciommo A, Feldman R, Leonov A, Piano A, Svistkova V, Titorenko VI 25839782
MASSSPEC
15 Integration of Growth and Cell Size via the TOR Pathway and the Dot6 Transcription Factor in Candida albicans. Chaillot J, Tebbji F, Mallick J, Sellam A 30593490
BIOLOGY

 

Title:Loss of Arp1, a putative actin-related protein, triggers filamentous and invasive growth and impairs pathogenicity in Candida albicans.
Authors:Yao SFeng YIslam AShrivastava MGu HLu YSheng JWhiteway MFeng J
Link:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33363697
DOI:10.1016/j.csbj.2020.11.034
Publication:Computational and structural biotechnology journal
Keywords:Actin-related proteinCandida albicansFilamentous growthInvasive growthNuclei separationPathogenicityRNA sequencingSpindle orientation
PMID:33363697 Category:Comput Struct Biotechnol J Date Added:2020-12-29
Dept Affiliation: BIOLOGY
1 Department of Pathogen Biology, School of Medicine, Nantong University, Nantong 226001, Jiangsu, China.
2 Nantong Health College of Jiangsu Province, Nantong 226010, Jiangsu, China.
3 Department of Biochemistry and Biophysics, University of Rochester Medical Center, Rochester 14642, NY, USA.
4 Biology Department, Concordia University, Montreal H4B 1R6, Quebec, Canada.

Description:

Loss of Arp1, a putative actin-related protein, triggers filamentous and invasive growth and impairs pathogenicity in Candida albicans.

Comput Struct Biotechnol J. 2020; 18:4002-4015

Authors: Yao S, Feng Y, Islam A, Shrivastava M, Gu H, Lu Y, Sheng J, Whiteway M, Feng J

Abstract

The polymorphous cellular shape of Candida albicans, in particular the transition from a yeast to a filamentous form, is crucial for either commensalism or life-threatening infections of the host. Various external or internal stimuli, including serum and nutrition starvation, have been shown to regulate filamentous growth primarily through two classical signaling pathways, the cAMP-PKA and the MAPK pathways. Genotoxic stress also induces filamentous growth, but through independent pathways, and little is known about negative regulation during this reversible morphological transition. In this study, we established that ARP1 in C. albicans, similar to its homolog in S. cerevisiae, has a role in nuclei separation and spindle orientation. Deletion of ARP1 generated filamentous and invasive growth as well as increased biofilm formation, accompanied by up-regulation of hyphae specific genes, such as HWP1, UME6 and ALS3. The filamentous and invasive growth of the ARP1 deletion strain was independent of transcription factors Efg1, Cph1 and Ume6, but was suppressed by deleting checkpoint BUB2 or overexpressing NRG1. Deletion of ARP1 impaired the colonization of Candida cells in mice and also attenuated virulence in a mouse model. All the data suggest that loss of ARP1 activates filamentous and invasive growth in vitro, and that it positively regulates virulence in vivo, which provides insight into actin-related morphology and pathogenicity in C. albicans.

PMID: 33363697 [PubMed]





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