All hyphae articles
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         Careers CareersSummer studentship: Owen investigates how fungal hyphae interact with lung cellsOwen Nicholson reports back on his AMI-sponsored summer studentship which investigated the role of Piezo1 in the immune response during fungal invasion of the human lung at the University of East Anglia. 
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         News NewsStinkbug leg organ contains symbiotic fungi to shield eggs from parasitic waspsWhat looked like a hearing organ on a tiny stinkbug’s leg turned out to be something far stranger: a fungal nursery that mother bugs use to coat their newly laid eggs in protective symbiotic hyphae, shielding their offspring from parasitic wasps. 
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         News NewsFungal toxin offers colonization support - in small dosesThe yeast fungus Candida albicans not only uses the toxin candidalysin to cause infections, but also to colonize the oral mucosa inconspicuously – but only in finely balanced amounts. Too little toxin prevents oral colonization, too much triggers the immune system. 
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         News NewsMushrooms could be the key to developing better materialsResearchers are studying the cell structure of fungi to learn how it determines their mechanical properties and what science can learn from that to create better materials. They analyzed their cell structures and tested them to calculate the stress loads they could handle. 
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         News NewsMitochondrial phosphate carrier plays an important role in virulence of Candida albicansScientists have found that the lack of MIR1 gene, which encodes mitochondrial phosphate carrier, can lead to severe virulence defects in Candida albicans. 
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         News NewsResearchers discover evolutionary “tipping point” in fungiScientists have found a ‘tipping point’ in the evolution of fungi that throttles their growth and sculpts their shapes, demonstrating how small changes in environmental factors can lead to huge changes in evolutionary outcomes. 
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         News NewsCandida albicans toxin plays a special role in the colonization of the digestive tractComparative studies on mice with a complete microbiome and a microbiome reduced by antibiotics now show that the previous assumption that the yeast form of Candida albicans is better suited for colonization needs to be revised. 
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         News NewsVacuum cleaner-effect in fungi can hold nanoplastics at bayResearchers have found that while nanoplastics reduce both bacterial and fungal growth, the fungus actually manages to ’clean up’ their surroundings, thereby easing the effect of the plastics. 
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         News NewsFungal toxin triggers NET traps formed by white blood cellsA new study sheds light on how neutrophils respond to C. albicans hyphae, which release a peptide toxin called candidalysin, exclusively secreted when C. albicans grows as hyphae and hence during invasive growth. 
