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1  extension where it attaches to the parental hypha.
2 e plasma membrane at the extreme apex of the hypha.
3 ne occupied the apical 0.5 microm of growing hypha.
4 ain distributed throughout the cell body and hypha.
5 dergo morphological transition from yeast to hypha.
6 esignated CIH1 (Colletotrichum Intracellular Hypha 1).
7 ermling has its nuclei distributed along the hypha and the septum formed near the spore body.
8 hfully duplicated the elongation of the main hypha and the two apical branches.
9 FP patches were highly mobile throughout the hypha and were concentrated near hyphal apices.
10 munopathology require hypha formation, other hypha-associated factors, or genetic interaction with EF
11                  In an effort to disentangle hypha-associated virulence factor regulation from morpho
12 and mobilization of Mg, Fe, Al, and K at the hypha-biotite interface.
13 rack formation, which are abundant below the hypha-biotite interface.
14       The oogonia are attached to a parental hypha by a short truncated stalk with a single septum.
15  fungi-biotite sections along three distinct hypha colonizing the [001] basal plane of biotite, revea
16 drogenase release) compared to that with the hypha-competent control.
17                                       In the hypha, cytoplasm flows directionally from cell to cell t
18                     However the nonvirulent, hypha-defective cla4 mutant line was considerably more r
19  intravaginal challenge of C57BL/6 mice with hypha-defective strains attained high levels of mucosal
20                   The conidiation and aerial hypha defects of the Deltagna-3 strain are similar to th
21                                              Hypha-deficient mutant C. albicans caused no or low mort
22 ans or with an isogenic, Deltaefg1/Deltaefg1 hypha-deficient mutant.
23 at calcineurin is not required for the yeast-hypha dimorphic transition, host cell adherence, or host
24  oxidase, which is necessary for penetration hypha elongation.
25 of GTP-locked Cdc42 reversed the polarity of hypha emergence from cathodal to anodal, an effect augme
26 he discovery that the cell wall of a growing hypha expands orthogonally has major repercussions on tw
27 ectively, showing clearly that cAMP promotes hypha formation in C. albicans.
28 the premature conidiation defect, but aerial hypha formation is still reduced.
29 n cultures containing farnesol or dodecanol, hypha formation was restored upon addition of dibutyryl-
30                             Candida albicans hypha formation which has been stimulated via the Ras1-c
31 s of SAPs to vaginal immunopathology require hypha formation, other hypha-associated factors, or gene
32 eletion of both copies of this gene prevents hypha formation.
33 cAMP-repressed genes and cells repressed for hypha formation.
34                                              Hypha-forming Candida also induced the nuclear disappear
35       Sb5 exudates also stimulated infection hypha growth and upregulated effector gene expression.
36 t strains developed germ tubes under several hypha-inducing conditions, they were unable to maintain
37 intain the hyphal growth mode in a synthetic hypha-inducing liquid medium and were deficient in the e
38 perature and low-oxygen environment found in hypha-laden infected tissue may underlie this poor recov
39 coinfection with C. albicans yeast-locked or hypha-locked mutants showed similar mortality, dissemina
40 udy, we show that Rad6p also regulates yeast-hypha morphogenesis in the human pathogen Candida albica
41 virulence-related functions, including yeast-hypha morphogenesis.
42 ogenetic signalling pathway to repress yeast-hypha morphogenesis.
43 nicity and the ability to undergo a yeast-to-hypha morphological switch in vitro.
44                                   Sinusoidal hypha morphology was altered in the mid1Delta, chs3Delta
45 y, tip-associated actin polarization in each hypha occurs before the events of the G(1)/S transition
46                                              Hypha orientation is an essential aspect of polarised gr
47 ol-rich apical microdomains, are involved in hypha orientation.
48  describe the molecular machinery regulating hypha orientation.
49  in the process was demonstrated using a non-hypha-producing and a noninvasive hypha-producing mutant
50 sing a non-hypha-producing and a noninvasive hypha-producing mutant strains of C. albicans.
51 ot contingent upon the presence of the Als3p hypha-specific adhesion.
52 , by the cyclin-dependent kinase Cdc28-Hgc1 (hypha-specific G(1) cyclin) downregulates Ace2 target ge
53 ce in vitro requires chromatin remodeling of hypha-specific gene promoters, although disrupting chrom
54                                      HWP1, a hypha-specific gene, was identified in a genetic screen
55 CaTup1-regulated genes, which includes known hypha-specific genes and other virulence factors.
56 terestingly, upstream sequences of all known hypha-specific genes are found to contain potential bind
57                                However, many hypha-specific genes do not have potential Cph2 binding
58 dium and were deficient in the expression of hypha-specific genes in this medium.
59 to exclusion of Nrg1 binding to promoters of hypha-specific genes or reduced NRG1 expression.
60 filamentous and invasive growth, derepresses hypha-specific genes, increases sensitivity to some stre
61       Ume6, the transcriptional activator of hypha-specific genes, is stabilized via regulation by Of
62 control the transcription of a common set of hypha-specific genes, many of which encode known virulen
63 n hyphal development and in the induction of hypha-specific genes.
64 sphorylation site of Efg1 displays a loss of hypha-specific repression of these genes and impaired ce
65                                            A hypha-specific surface protein, Hwp1, with similarities
66         These results highlight the yeast-to-hypha switch and the associated morphogenetic response a
67              Many regulators of the yeast-to-hypha switch have emerged from intensive investigations
68 ta cph1Delta/Delta) controlling the yeast-to-hypha switch revealed a crucial role for morphogenetic s
69 ginine activated an Efg1p-dependent yeast-to-hypha switch, enabling wild-type C. albicans and KWN8 to
70 ytic patches, 1-2 mum behind the apex of the hypha, that moves forward as the tip grows.
71          Following a period of maturation, a hypha then emerges at the plant interface and penetrates
72         VezA-GFP signals are enriched at the hypha tip in an actin-dependent manner but are not obvio
73 igations of this morphogenetic step, but the hypha-to-yeast switch remains poorly understood.
74 , a novel putative regulator involved in the hypha-to-yeast switch was identified, the C. albicans pe
75 rapid induction of hyphal growth and delayed hypha-to-yeast transitions.
76 ndergoes two developmental programs, the bud-hypha transition and high-frequency phenotypic switching
77 nvolve differential gene expression, the bud-hypha transition and high-frequency phenotypic switching
78 has been implicated in controlling the yeast-hypha transition and pathogenesis of Candida albicans.
79 ) and synthetic PGE(2) enhanced the yeast-to-hypha transition in C. albicans.
80 2) has been demonstrated to regulate the bud-hypha transition in C. albicans[14, 15], expression of v
81       These studies demonstrate that the bud-hypha transition is accompanied by the de novo synthesis
82  study was to determine whether the yeast-to-hypha transition is required for the hallmark inflammato
83 ence factors coregulated during the yeast-to-hypha transition is unknown.
84 on of cell morphogenesis during the yeast-to-hypha transition of C. albicans, we mutated CaCLN1.
85 monstrating that it undergoes either the bud-hypha transition or high-frequency phenotypic switching,
86  the promoters of genes regulated by the bud-hypha transition, high frequency switching and cues from
87 ce in the host is the morphogenetic yeast-to-hypha transition.
88 le signaling pathways to control the yeast-->hypha transition.
89 CaRAD6 mRNA levels decrease during the yeast-hypha transition.
90 f 10 mM cAMP and dibutyryl cAMP promoted bud-hypha transitions and filamentous growth in the cap1/cap
91 lating genes that control cAMP levels to bud-hypha transitions has not been reported.
92  relationship between cAMP signaling and bud-hypha transitions in C. albicans, we identified, cloned,
93 cyclic AMP (cAMP) increases in promoting bud-hypha transitions, but genetic evidence relating genes t
94 d cAMP signaling pathway is required for bud-hypha transitions, filamentous growth, and the pathogene
95  that FlbB localizes to both the apex of the hypha, where it interacts with and is anchored by FlbE,
96 mbly of an IF cytoskeleton provides each new hypha with an additional stress-bearing structure at its

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