Morphology, Development, and Pigment Production of Talaromyces marneffei are Diversely Modulated Under Physiologically Relevant Growth Conditions
Talaromyces marneffei is an opportunistic pathogenic fungus that mainly affects HIV-positive individuals endemic to Southeast Asia and China. Increasing efforts have been made in the pathogenic mechanism and host interactions understanding of this pathogen in the last two decades; however, there are...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Current microbiology 2024-05, Vol.81 (5), p.119-119, Article 119 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Talaromyces marneffei
is an opportunistic pathogenic fungus that mainly affects HIV-positive individuals endemic to Southeast Asia and China. Increasing efforts have been made in the pathogenic mechanism and host interactions understanding of this pathogen in the last two decades; however, there are still no conclusions on how
T. marneffei
was transmitted from the donor bamboo rats to humans. A perception that the failure of fungus isolation from soil was attributed to the low salt tolerance of
T. marneffei.
Therefore, the effect of environmental fluctuations in fungal growth and development is fundamental for the characterization of its origin and fungal biology understanding. Herein, we characterized high osmolarity, pH, metal ions, nutrients, and oxidative stress have versatile effects on
T. marneffei
hyphal or yeast growth, conidia generation, and pigment production. Among these, high pH, low glucose amounts, and the inorganic nitrogen ammonium tartrate stimulated the red pigment production, whereas high osmolarity, high pH, and the inorganic nitrogen sodium nitrate could significantly accelerate the conidia generation. Specifically, zinc starvation repressed conidia generation and prevented the wrinkled yeast colony formation, indicating the function of zinc regulators in pathogenicity regulation. Since conidia are recognized as the infectious propagules, the effects characterization of different environmental factors in
T. marneffei
morphology in this work will not only expand the growth and pathogenic biology understanding of the fungus but also provide more clues for the
T. marneffei
infection transmission origin investigation. |
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ISSN: | 0343-8651 1432-0991 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s00284-024-03623-x |