2017
DOI: 10.1002/yea.3242
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Hybridization and emergence of virulence in opportunistic human yeast pathogens

Abstract: Hybridization between different species can result in the emergence of new lineages and adaptive phenotypes. Occasionally, hybridization in fungal organisms can drive the appearance of opportunistic lifestyles or shifts to new hosts, resulting in the emergence of novel pathogens. In recent years, an increasing number of studies have documented the existence of hybrids in diverse yeast clades, including some comprising human pathogens. Comparative and population genomics studies performed on these clades are en… Show more

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Cited by 76 publications
(128 citation statements)
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References 112 publications
(163 reference statements)
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“…Advances in Next-Generation sequencing have recently allowed the identification of many hybrid yeasts with clinical relevance (Pryszcz et al 2014;Hagen et al 2015;Pryszcz et al 2015;Schröder et al 2016;Mixão et al 2019). Hybridization between diverged lineages is known to have an important role in the adaptation to new environments, or even in the emergence of new pathogens, as it is hypothesized to be the case of C. metapsilosis and C. inconspicua (Pryszcz et al 2015;Mixão and Gabaldón 2018;Mixão et al 2019). The hybrid nature of these strains was discovered by noting the presence of highly heterozygous genomes with a large divergence between alternative haplotypes and showing characteristic non-homogeneous distributions of heterozygous variants, resulting in highly heterozygous blocks separated by regions of low heterozygosity, likely resulting from LOH events.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Advances in Next-Generation sequencing have recently allowed the identification of many hybrid yeasts with clinical relevance (Pryszcz et al 2014;Hagen et al 2015;Pryszcz et al 2015;Schröder et al 2016;Mixão et al 2019). Hybridization between diverged lineages is known to have an important role in the adaptation to new environments, or even in the emergence of new pathogens, as it is hypothesized to be the case of C. metapsilosis and C. inconspicua (Pryszcz et al 2015;Mixão and Gabaldón 2018;Mixão et al 2019). The hybrid nature of these strains was discovered by noting the presence of highly heterozygous genomes with a large divergence between alternative haplotypes and showing characteristic non-homogeneous distributions of heterozygous variants, resulting in highly heterozygous blocks separated by regions of low heterozygosity, likely resulting from LOH events.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In this regard, C. tropicalis have been shown to undergo a parasexual cycle under laboratory conditions (Seervai et al 2013), although it is unclear how widespread is this ability among Candida species. This raises once more the question of the importance of hybridization for the emergence of yeast pathogens (Mixão and Gabaldón 2018) and poses the intriguing question of whether C. albicans ability to colonize and infect humans was an emerging phenotype enabled by this hybridization event.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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