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1 November 2003 Cell Death Mechanisms in the Human Opportunistic Pathogen Candida albicans
KATEY M. LEMAR, CARSTEN T. MÜLLER, SUSAN PLUMMER, DAVID LLOYD
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Abstract

Difficulties arising during chemotherapy of Candida albicans necessitate novel chemotherapeutic strategies. Garlic extract and two of its constituents, diallyl disulphide and allyl alcohol, are potentially useful anti-candidal agents. Flow Cytometry has been used to measure the population distributions of apoptotic/necrotic cell death using annexin V-FITC/propidium iodide and oxidative stress dichlorodihydrofluorescein. Candicidal mechanisms may be due to programmed cell death induced by oxidative stress, mediated by the generation of reactive oxygen species or alternatively by the depletion of cellular thiols, which normally act as redox buffer systems for defence. We suggest that mechanisms that these anti-candidal agents have in common is the triggering some of the characteristics of apoptotic cell death.

KATEY M. LEMAR, CARSTEN T. MÜLLER, SUSAN PLUMMER, and DAVID LLOYD "Cell Death Mechanisms in the Human Opportunistic Pathogen Candida albicans," The Journal of Eukaryotic Microbiology 50(6), 685-686, (1 November 2003). https://doi.org/10.1368/1066-5234(2003)050[0685:CDMITH]2.0.CO;2
Published: 1 November 2003
JOURNAL ARTICLE
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KEYWORDS
Apoptosis
cellular thiols
garlic
Necrosis
oxidative stress
yeast
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