“We've got to get out”—Strategies of human pathogenic fungi to escape from phagocytes

J Sonnberger, L Kasper, T Lange… - Molecular …, 2024 - Wiley Online Library
J Sonnberger, L Kasper, T Lange, S Brunke, B Hube
Molecular Microbiology, 2024Wiley Online Library
Human fungal pathogens are a deadly and underappreciated risk to global health that most
severely affect immunocompromised individuals. A virulence attribute shared by some of the
most clinically relevant fungal species is their ability to survive inside macrophages and
escape from these immune cells. In this review, we discuss the mechanisms behind
intracellular survival and elaborate how escape is mediated by lytic and non‐lytic pathways
as well as strategies to induce programmed host cell death. We also discuss persistence as …
Abstract
Human fungal pathogens are a deadly and underappreciated risk to global health that most severely affect immunocompromised individuals. A virulence attribute shared by some of the most clinically relevant fungal species is their ability to survive inside macrophages and escape from these immune cells. In this review, we discuss the mechanisms behind intracellular survival and elaborate how escape is mediated by lytic and non‐lytic pathways as well as strategies to induce programmed host cell death. We also discuss persistence as an alternative to rapid host cell exit. In the end, we address the consequences of fungal escape for the host immune response and provide future perspectives for research and development of targeted therapies.
Wiley Online Library
以上显示的是最相近的搜索结果。 查看全部搜索结果