Several fungi can assume either a filamentous or a unicellular morphology in response to changes in environmental conditions. This process, known as dimorphism, is a characteristic of several pathogenic fungi, e.g., Histoplasma capsulatum, Blastomyces dermatitidis, and Paracoccidioides brasiliensis, and appears to be directly related to adaptation from a saprobic to a parasitic existence. H. capsulatum is the most extensively studied of the dimorphic fungi, with a parasitic phase consisting of yeast cells and a saprobic mycelial phase. In culture, the transition of H. capsulatum from one phase to the other can be triggered reversibly by shifting the temperature of incubation between 25 degrees C (mycelia) and 37 degrees C (yeast phase). Myc...
Ultrastructural changes observed during the first 24 hours of mycelium to yeast transition in the di...
The ultrastructural morphology of the early phases of mycelium-yeast transition in Histoplasma capsu...
Survival at host temperature is a critical trait for pathogenic microbes of humans. Thermally dimorp...
Several fungi can assume either a filamentous or a unicellular morphology in response to changes in ...
Histoplasma capsulatum is the causative agent of histoplasmosis, a systemic fungal disease world-wid...
We compared the mycelial to yeast transitions of the Downs strain of Histoplasma capsulatum (low lev...
Phenotypic switching between 2 opposing cellular states is a fundamental aspect of biology, and fung...
We compared the mycelial to yeast transitions of the Downs strain of Histoplasma capsulatum (low lev...
The capacity for pathogenic fungi to change morphology during their lifecycle is widespread. However...
Morphological changes are a very common and effective strategy for pathogens to survive in the mamma...
Changes in temperature and a variety of other stimuli coordinately induce transcription of a specifi...
Ultrastructural changes observed during the first 24 hours of mycelium to yeast transition in the di...
The ultrastructural morphology of the early phases of mycelium-yeast transition in Histoplasma capsu...
Survival at host temperature is a critical trait for pathogenic microbes of humans. Thermally dimorp...
Several fungi can assume either a filamentous or a unicellular morphology in response to changes in ...
Histoplasma capsulatum is the causative agent of histoplasmosis, a systemic fungal disease world-wid...
We compared the mycelial to yeast transitions of the Downs strain of Histoplasma capsulatum (low lev...
Phenotypic switching between 2 opposing cellular states is a fundamental aspect of biology, and fung...
We compared the mycelial to yeast transitions of the Downs strain of Histoplasma capsulatum (low lev...
The capacity for pathogenic fungi to change morphology during their lifecycle is widespread. However...
Morphological changes are a very common and effective strategy for pathogens to survive in the mamma...
Changes in temperature and a variety of other stimuli coordinately induce transcription of a specifi...
Ultrastructural changes observed during the first 24 hours of mycelium to yeast transition in the di...
The ultrastructural morphology of the early phases of mycelium-yeast transition in Histoplasma capsu...
Survival at host temperature is a critical trait for pathogenic microbes of humans. Thermally dimorp...