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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Dynamic responses of the fungal cell wall to stress and antifungal treatment

Walker, Louise January 2010 (has links)
The main aim of this project was to determine the potential of increased chitin content as a mechanism of resistance to caspofungin in different fungal pathogens. <i>C. albicans</i> wild-type cells were pre-grown with a combination of CaCl<sub>2</sub> and CFW prior to caspofungin treatment. This result sin a three-fold increase in cell wall chitin. Wild-type cells, which had elevated chitin content, were less susceptible to caspofungin. Priming cells to activated chitin synthesis was also able to compensate for the loss of the normally essential <i>CaCHS1</i>, through formation of three novel forms of salvage septa. In the absence of both <i>Ca</i>Chs1 and <i>Ca</i>Chs3, which are typically involved in septum formation, the class I chitin synthases, <i>Ca</i>Chs2 and <i>Ca</i>Chs8, could be stimulated to synthesise a proximally offset salvage septum. When <i>Ca</i>Chs3 was the only remaining chitin synthase, treatment with CaCl<sub>2</sub> and CFW, led to the formation of thick chitin-rich salvage septa. <i>Ca</i>Chs2<i> </i>and <i>Ca</i>Chs3 could be stimulated by treatment with CaCl<sub>2</sub> and CFW to synthesise a thin salvage septum similar to the septum of wild-type cells. All three salvage septa were capable of restoring viability and cell division in <i>C. albicans.</i> The compensatory increase in chitin content in response to caspofungin treatment was not specific to <i>C. albicans</i> because clinical isolates of <i>C. tropicalis, C. parapsilosis </i>and <i>C. guilliermondii</i> and the filamentous fungus, <i>A. fumigatus</i>, also demonstrated an increase in chitin content after treatment with caspofungin. Isolates of <i>C. glabrata</i> and <i>C. krusei</i> showed no change in chitin content when exposed to caspofungin. The results of this thesis highlight the potential for using chitin synthase inhibitors in combination therapy with the echinocandins.
2

Regulation and cell biology of chitin synthesis in Candida albicans

Preechasuth, Kanya January 2013 (has links)
Chitin biosynthesis in the fungal cell wall is essential for cell viability. Chitin play roles in maintaining cellular integrity and up regulation of chitin synthesis helps protect the cell from cell wall stresses or cell wall damaging antifungal agents such as caspofungin. In Candida albicans chitin is synthesised by four chitin synthases (Chs), Chs1, Chs2, Chs3, and Chs8. The biological function of Chs2 and Chs8 (class I chitin synthases) is less well understood. The major objective of this thesis was to understand the biological function of the class I chitin synthases. Chs2-YFP and Chs8-YFP showed a dynamic localisation at septation sites, which were first visualised as a bar which then contracted to a spot. This spot then separated into two spots, one on each sides of the septum. These two spots remained there until yeast cell separation, and remained at this location throughout several subsequent hyphal cell cycles. Chs2-YFP also localised to hyphal tips. The phenotype of a chs2Δchs8Δ double mutant was re-investigated using the propidium iodide. Intact dead germ tubes and hyphal tip lysis was observed in a chs2Δchs8Δ mutant cells. This suggested that Chs2 and Chs8 play a major role in the maintenance of hyphal tip integrity and polarised growth and perhaps a minor role in septum formation. Studies were also performed to assess whether phosphorylation regulated the localisation of Chs2-YFP. It was shown that the localisation of Chs2-YFP to septation sites was regulated by phosphorylation on S222. A version of Chs2-YFP that could not be phosphorylated (Chs2S222A-YFP) localised at the septa in lower amounts than the Chs2-YFP, and a version of Chs2-YFP that mimicked constitutive phosphorylation (Chs2S222E-YFP) localised normally. This suggested that phosphorylation of Chs2 on S222 facilitates the localisation of Chs2-YFP at septation sites, and that dephosphorylation is not required for this cellular localisation. In the presence of cell wall stresses (CaCl2/CFW) and caspofungin, more Chs2-YFP was observed and the average intensity of fluorescence of Chs2-YFP was higher in the presence of these stresses than in untreated cells.

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