Recent Advances in the Study of the Host-Fungus Interaction

Fungal infections represent nowadays a significant burden on the healthcare system of most of the countries, and are among the infections with the highest mortality rates. This has fostered the study of the interaction of these organisms with the human host. The outer most layer of a fungal cell is...

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Format: eBook
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media SA 2017
Series:Frontiers Research Topics
Subjects:
Online Access:Open Access: DOAB, download the publication
Open Access: DOAB: description of the publication
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720 1 |a Attila Gacser  |4 aut 
720 1 |a Hector M. Mora-Montes  |4 aut 
245 0 0 |a Recent Advances in the Study of the Host-Fungus Interaction 
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520 |a Fungal infections represent nowadays a significant burden on the healthcare system of most of the countries, and are among the infections with the highest mortality rates. This has fostered the study of the interaction of these organisms with the human host. The outer most layer of a fungal cell is the cell wall, and together with the secreted components into the extracellular compartment, are the first lines of contact with the host cells. This interaction is critical for tissue adhesion, colonization and damage. In addition, these fungal extracellular components will define the outcome of the interaction with the host immune cells, leading either to the establishment of a protective antifungal immune response or to an immune-evasive mechanism by the fungal cell. On the other hand, our immune system has effectively evolved to deal with fungal pathogens, developing strategies for cell eradication, burden control, or antigen presentation from the innate branch to the adaptive immune response. Here, we provide a series of comprehensive review papers dealing with both aspect of the interaction fungus-immune cells: the role of virulence factors and cell wall components during such interaction, and the recent advances in the study of cellular receptors in the establishment of a protective anti-fungal immune response. 
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653 |a Aspergillus 
653 |a Candida albicans 
653 |a Candida parapsilosis 
653 |a Cell Wall 
653 |a Cryptococcus 
653 |a Dermatophytes 
653 |a Histoplasma 
653 |a host-fungus interaction 
653 |a melanin 
653 |a Paraccocidioides 
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