Journal ArticlemBio · October 8, 2025
Infections caused by fungal pathogens such as Candida and Cryptococcus are associated with high mortality rates, partly due to limitations in the current antifungal arsenal. This highlights the need for antifungal drug targets with novel mechanisms of acti ...
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Journal ArticleFungal Biol · August 2025
The Fifth International Symposium on Fungal Stress (ISFUS) brought together in Brazil many of the leaders in the field of fungal stress responses, from fourteen countries, for four days of outstanding science ranging from basic research to studies with agr ...
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Journal ArticleCell Rep · April 22, 2025
Salmonella causes ∼1 million cases of gastroenteritis annually in the United States. Critical to virulence are secreted effectors that reprogram host functions. We previously discovered the effector SarA facilitates phosphorylation of STAT3, inducing expre ...
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Journal ArticleNPJ Antimicrob Resist · April 14, 2025
Invasive fungal infections are responsible for millions of deaths worldwide each year. Therefore, focusing on innovative approaches to developing therapeutics that target fungal pathogens is critical. Here, we discuss targeting the fungal trehalose biosynt ...
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Journal ArticleJ Biol Chem · November 2024
Protein ubiquitination is essential to govern cells' ability to cope with harmful environments by regulating many aspects of protein dynamics from synthesis to degradation. As important as the ubiquitination process, the reversal of ubiquitin chains mediat ...
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Journal ArticleProc Natl Acad Sci U S A · August 6, 2024
Invasive fungal diseases are a major threat to human health, resulting in more than 1.5 million annual deaths worldwide. The arsenal of antifungal therapeutics remains limited and is in dire need of drugs that target additional biosynthetic pathways that a ...
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Journal ArticleCell Genom · November 9, 2022
During pandemics, individuals exhibit differences in risk and clinical outcomes. Here, we developed single-cell high-throughput human in vitro susceptibility testing (scHi-HOST), a method for rapidly identifying genetic variants that confer resistance and ...
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Journal ArticleJ Pediatric Infect Dis Soc · March 26, 2021
BACKGROUND: Outbreaks of respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) in neonatal intensive care units (NICUs) are of concern because of the risk of severe disease in young infants. We describe an outbreak of RSV in a NICU and use whole genome sequencing (WGS) to bet ...
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Journal ArticleCell Host Microbe · January 8, 2020
Bacteria masterfully co-opt and subvert host signal transduction. As a paradigmatic example, Salmonella uses two type-3 secretion systems to inject effector proteins that facilitate Salmonella entry, establishment of an intracellular niche, and modulation ...
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Journal ArticleProc Natl Acad Sci U S A · June 21, 2016
HopAF1 is a type III effector protein of unknown function encoded in the genomes of several strains of Pseudomonas syringae and other plant pathogens. Structural modeling predicted that HopAF1 is closely related to deamidase proteins. Deamidation is the ir ...
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Journal ArticleMicrobiol Mol Biol Rev · September 2013
Pathogenic bacteria commonly deploy enzymes to promote virulence. These enzymes can modulate the functions of host cell targets. While the actions of some enzymes can be very obvious (e.g., digesting plant cell walls), others have more subtle activities. D ...
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Journal ArticleMol Plant Microbe Interact · April 2012
Xanthomonas oryzae pv. oryzae is the causal agent of bacterial blight of rice. The XopR protein, secreted into plant cells through the type III secretion apparatus, is widely conserved in xanthomonads and is predicted to play important roles in bacterial p ...
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