While sexual reproduction is pervasive in eukaryotic cells, the strategies employed by fungal species to achieve and complete sexual cycles is highly diverse and complex. Many fungi, including Saccharomyces cerevisiae and Schizosaccharomyces pombe, are homothallic (able to mate with their own mitotic descendants) because of homothallic switching (HO) endonuclease-mediated mating-type switching. Under laboratory conditions, the human fungal pathogen Candida albicans can undergo both heterothallic and homothallic (opposite- and same-sex) mating. However, both mating modes require the presence of cells with two opposite mating types (MTLa/a and α/α) in close proximity. Given the predominant clonal feature of this yeast in the human host, both ...
It has been proposed that the ancestral fungus was mating competent and homothallic. However, many ...
It has been proposed that the ancestral fungus was mating competent and homothallic. However, many m...
AbstractTsong et al. (2003)(this issue of Cell) characterize the role of mating type genes in Candid...
While sexual reproduction is pervasive in eukaryotic cells, the strategies employed by fungal specie...
Potential autocrine (A) and paracrine (B) pheromone response models for stress-induced mating-projec...
Sexual reproduction is a universal mechanism for generating genetic diversity in eukaryotes. Fungi e...
Modes of sexual reproduction in eukaryotic organisms are extremely diverse. The human fungal pathoge...
<div><p>Sexual reproduction is a universal mechanism for generating genetic diversity in eukaryotes....
AbstractTsong et al. (2003)(this issue of Cell) characterize the role of mating type genes in Candid...
Candida albicans is a major human fungal pathogen, capable of switching among a range of morphologic...
AbstractDiscovered over a decade ago, white-opaque switching in the human fungal pathogen Candida al...
Recently, it was demonstrated that Candida albicans contains mating type genes. Since that discovery...
AbstractThe fungal pathogen Candida albicans can mate under highly controlled conditions. It can als...
Like many other important opportunistic human fungal pathogens, for more than a century Candida alb...
Since its classiÞcation nearly 80 years ago, the human pathogen Candida albicans has been designated...
It has been proposed that the ancestral fungus was mating competent and homothallic. However, many ...
It has been proposed that the ancestral fungus was mating competent and homothallic. However, many m...
AbstractTsong et al. (2003)(this issue of Cell) characterize the role of mating type genes in Candid...
While sexual reproduction is pervasive in eukaryotic cells, the strategies employed by fungal specie...
Potential autocrine (A) and paracrine (B) pheromone response models for stress-induced mating-projec...
Sexual reproduction is a universal mechanism for generating genetic diversity in eukaryotes. Fungi e...
Modes of sexual reproduction in eukaryotic organisms are extremely diverse. The human fungal pathoge...
<div><p>Sexual reproduction is a universal mechanism for generating genetic diversity in eukaryotes....
AbstractTsong et al. (2003)(this issue of Cell) characterize the role of mating type genes in Candid...
Candida albicans is a major human fungal pathogen, capable of switching among a range of morphologic...
AbstractDiscovered over a decade ago, white-opaque switching in the human fungal pathogen Candida al...
Recently, it was demonstrated that Candida albicans contains mating type genes. Since that discovery...
AbstractThe fungal pathogen Candida albicans can mate under highly controlled conditions. It can als...
Like many other important opportunistic human fungal pathogens, for more than a century Candida alb...
Since its classiÞcation nearly 80 years ago, the human pathogen Candida albicans has been designated...
It has been proposed that the ancestral fungus was mating competent and homothallic. However, many ...
It has been proposed that the ancestral fungus was mating competent and homothallic. However, many m...
AbstractTsong et al. (2003)(this issue of Cell) characterize the role of mating type genes in Candid...