Journal article

The two-component histidine kinases DrkA and SlnA are required for in vivo growth in the human pathogen Penicillium marneffei

KJ Boyce, L Schreider, L Kirszenblat, A Andrianopoulos

Molecular Microbiology | WILEY | Published : 2011

Abstract

In order to cause disease fungal pathogens must be capable of evading or tolerating the host immune defence system. One commonly utilized evasion mechanism is the ability to continually reside within macrophages of the innate immune system and survive subsequent phagocytic destruction. For intracellular growth to occur, fungal pathogens which typically grow in a filamentous hyphal form in the environment must be able to switch growth to a unicellular yeast growth form in a process known as dimorphic switching. The cue to undergo dimorphic switching relies on the recognition of, and response to, the intracellular host environment. Two-component signalling systems are utilized by eukaryotes to..

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University of Melbourne Researchers

Grants

Funding Acknowledgements

We would like to thank Dr Simon Crawford for sectioning and assistance with the transmission electron microscopy, Quentin Lang for plate photography and Elia Garrido for the cloning of pkuA. This work was supported by grants from the National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia and the Howard Hughes Medical Institute. A.A. is a Howard Hughes Medical Institute International Research Scholar.