UCD School of Biomolecular and Biomedical Science, Conway Institute, University College Dublin, Dublin 4, Ireland.
Clin Microbiol Rev. 2010 Jan;23(1):140-59. doi: 10.1128/CMR.00053-09.
Human fungal pathogens are associated with diseases ranging from dandruff and skin colonization to invasive bloodstream infections. The major human pathogens belong to the Candida, Aspergillus, and Cryptococcus clades, and infections have high and increasing morbidity and mortality. Many human fungal pathogens were originally assumed to be asexual. However, recent advances in genome sequencing, which revealed that many species have retained the genes required for the sexual machinery, have dramatically influenced our understanding of the biology of these organisms. Predictions of a rare or cryptic sexual cycle have been supported experimentally for some species. Here, I examine the evidence that human pathogens reproduce sexually. The evolution of the mating-type locus in ascomycetes (including Candida and Aspergillus species) and basidiomycetes (Malassezia and Cryptococcus) is discussed. I provide an overview of how sex is suppressed in different species and discuss the potential associations with pathogenesis.
人类真菌病原体与各种疾病相关,从头皮屑和皮肤定植到侵袭性血流感染。主要的人类病原体属于念珠菌属、曲霉属和隐球菌属,感染具有高且不断增加的发病率和死亡率。许多人类真菌病原体最初被认为是无性的。然而,最近在基因组测序方面的进展表明,许多物种保留了进行有性生殖所需的基因,这极大地影响了我们对这些生物体生物学的理解。一些物种的罕见或隐性有性循环的预测已经得到实验支持。在这里,我检查了人类病原体有性繁殖的证据。讨论了子囊菌(包括念珠菌属和曲霉属物种)和担子菌(马拉色菌属和隐球菌属)交配型基因座的进化。我概述了不同物种中如何抑制有性生殖,并讨论了与发病机制的潜在关联。