Infectious diseases are a leading cause of morbidity and mortality worldwide, and human pathogens have long been recognized as one of the main sources of evolutionary pressure, resulting in a high variable genetic background in immune-related genes. The study of the genetic contribution to infectious diseases has undergone tremendous advances over the last decades. Here, focusing on genetic predisposition to fungal diseases, we provide an overview of the available approaches for studying human genetic susceptibility to infections, reviewing current methodological and practical limitations. We describe how the classical methods available, such as family-based studies and candidate gene studies, have contributed to the discovery of crucial su...
Candidaemia is a bloodstream yeast infection caused by the opportunistic fungal pathogen Candida alb...
Owing to their small size and paucity of phenotypic characters, progress in the evolutionary biology...
Invasive aspergillosis is a common and life-threatening infection in immunocom-promised individuals....
Infectious diseases are a leading cause of morbidity and mortality worldwide, and human pathogens ha...
Infectious diseases are a leading cause of morbidity and mortality worldwide, and human pathogens ha...
AbstractCurrent knowledge on the human pathophysiology of fungal infections highlights the crucial r...
Over the ages, fungi have associated with different parts of the human body and established symbioti...
Contains fulltext : 208806.pdf (preprint version ) (Closed access)Our relative ina...
Our relative inability to predict the development of fungal disease and its clinical outcome raises ...
AbstractFungi are a major threat in immunocompromised patients. Despite presenting similar degrees o...
Candida spp. are medically important fungi causing severe mucosal and life-threatening invasive infe...
Invasive fungal diseases remain nowadays life-threatening conditions affecting multiple clinical set...
BACKGROUND: Candidemia, one of the most common causes of fungal bloodstream infection, leads to mort...
Fungal pathogens pose an increasingly worrying threat to human health, food security and ecosystem d...
Contains fulltext : 137429.pdf (Publisher’s version ) (Closed access)A recent surg...
Candidaemia is a bloodstream yeast infection caused by the opportunistic fungal pathogen Candida alb...
Owing to their small size and paucity of phenotypic characters, progress in the evolutionary biology...
Invasive aspergillosis is a common and life-threatening infection in immunocom-promised individuals....
Infectious diseases are a leading cause of morbidity and mortality worldwide, and human pathogens ha...
Infectious diseases are a leading cause of morbidity and mortality worldwide, and human pathogens ha...
AbstractCurrent knowledge on the human pathophysiology of fungal infections highlights the crucial r...
Over the ages, fungi have associated with different parts of the human body and established symbioti...
Contains fulltext : 208806.pdf (preprint version ) (Closed access)Our relative ina...
Our relative inability to predict the development of fungal disease and its clinical outcome raises ...
AbstractFungi are a major threat in immunocompromised patients. Despite presenting similar degrees o...
Candida spp. are medically important fungi causing severe mucosal and life-threatening invasive infe...
Invasive fungal diseases remain nowadays life-threatening conditions affecting multiple clinical set...
BACKGROUND: Candidemia, one of the most common causes of fungal bloodstream infection, leads to mort...
Fungal pathogens pose an increasingly worrying threat to human health, food security and ecosystem d...
Contains fulltext : 137429.pdf (Publisher’s version ) (Closed access)A recent surg...
Candidaemia is a bloodstream yeast infection caused by the opportunistic fungal pathogen Candida alb...
Owing to their small size and paucity of phenotypic characters, progress in the evolutionary biology...
Invasive aspergillosis is a common and life-threatening infection in immunocom-promised individuals....