68 research outputs found
Las Becas SEProt: contribución de la SEProt a la formación de los jóvenes investigadores en Proteómica
Comunicaciones a congreso
Analysis of Candida Albicans surface proteins in expoential and stationary phases of growth
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2D-DIGE analysis of potentially pathogen saccharomyces sereviciae strains isolated from dietary supplements after incubation in human blood
Comunicaciones a congreso
InmunoProteómica de la respuesta a la infección sistémica en ratón con una cepa Sccharomyces cerevisiae procedente de suplementos dietéticos
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Use of 2-D Dige and preparative denaturing IEF to enhance sensitivity in the differential protein expression analysis of Candida Albicans yeast-to-Hypha transition
Comunicaciones a congreso
The external face of Candida albicans: A proteomic view of the cell surface and the extracellular environment.
The cell surface and secreted proteins are the initial points of contact between Candida albicans and the host. Improvements in protein extraction approaches and mass spectrometers have allowed researchers to obtain a comprehensive knowledge of these external subproteomes. In this paper, we review the published proteomic studies that have examined C. albicans extracellular proteins, including the cell surface proteins or surfome and the secreted proteins or secretome. The use of different approaches to isolate cell wall and cell surface proteins, such as fractionation approaches or cell shaving, have resulted in different outcomes. Proteins with N-terminal signal peptide, known as classically secreted proteins, and those that lack the signal peptide, known as unconventionally secreted proteins, have been consistently identified. Existing studies on C. albicans extracellular vesicles reveal that they are relevant as an unconventional pathway of protein secretion and can help explain the presence of proteins without a signal peptide, including some moonlighting proteins, in the cell wall and the extracellular environment. According to the global view presented in this review, cell wall proteins, virulence factors such as adhesins or hydrolytic enzymes, metabolic enzymes and stress related-proteins are important groups of proteins in C. albicans surfome and secretome.
BIOLOGICAL SIGNIFICANCE
Candida albicans extracellular proteins are involved in biofilm formation, cell nutrient acquisition and cell wall integrity maintenance. Furthermore, these proteins include virulence factors and immunogenic proteins. This review is of outstanding interest, not only because it extends knowledge of the C. albicans surface and extracellular proteins that could be related with pathogenesis, but also because it presents insights that may facilitate the future development of new antifungal drugs and vaccines and contributes to efforts to identify new biomarkers that can be employed to diagnose candidiasis. Here, we list more than 570 C. albicans proteins that have been identified in extracellular locations to deliver the most extensive catalogue of this type of proteins to date. Moreover, we describe 16 proteins detected at all locations analysed in the works revised. These proteins include the glycophosphatidylinositol (GPI)-anchored proteins Ecm33, Pga4 and Phr2 and unconventional secretory proteins such as Eft2, Eno1, Hsp70, Pdc11, Pgk1 and Tdh3. Furthermore, 13 of these 16 proteins are immunogenic and could represent a set of interesting candidates for biomarker discovery
Quantitative proteome and acidic subproteome profiling of candida albicans yeast-to-hypha transition
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