Research Keyword: Rab proteins

Roles of the Sec2p Gene in the Growth and Pathogenicity Regulation of Aspergillus fumigatus

Scientists studied a gene called Sec2p in a harmful fungus that causes serious lung infections in people with weak immune systems. When they removed this gene, the fungus grew more slowly and was much less dangerous to infected mice, with 67% of mice surviving compared to only 22% with normal fungus. The gene controls how the fungus breaks down its own cell parts for nutrition and repairs its cell wall, so blocking it weakens the fungus significantly.

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The small GTPases FoRab5, FoRab7, and FoRab8 regulate vesicle transport to modulate vegetative development and pathogenicity in Fusarium oxysporum f. sp. conglutinans

Researchers studied three important protein switches (Rab GTPases) in a fungus that causes cabbage wilt disease. By deleting these proteins one at a time, they found that each plays a critical role in fungal growth, spore production, and the ability to infect plants. The findings suggest that targeting these proteins could be a strategy to control the devastating cabbage wilt disease.

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