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Molecular regulation of Histoplasma dimorphism.

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Temperature serves as a fundamental signal in biological systems. In some microbial pathogens of humans, mammalian body temperature triggers establishment and maintenance of a developmental program that allows the microbe… Click to show full abstract

Temperature serves as a fundamental signal in biological systems. In some microbial pathogens of humans, mammalian body temperature triggers establishment and maintenance of a developmental program that allows the microbe to survive and thrive in the host. Histoplasma capsulatum is one of a group of fungal pathogens called thermally dimorphic fungi, all of which respond to mammalian body temperature by converting from an environmental mold form that inhabits the soil into a parasitic form that causes disease in the host. It has been known for decades that temperature is a key signal that is sufficient to trigger the switch from the soil to host form (and vice versa) in the laboratory. Recent molecular studies have identified a number of key regulators that are required to specify each of the developmental forms in response to temperature. Here we review the regulatory circuits that govern temperature-dependent dimorphism in Histoplasma.

Keywords: molecular regulation; temperature; regulation histoplasma; histoplasma dimorphism; histoplasma

Journal Title: Current opinion in microbiology
Year Published: 2019

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