4.6 Review

Fungal Quorum-Sensing Molecules: A Review of Their Antifungal Effect againstCandidaBiofilms

Journal

JOURNAL OF FUNGI
Volume 6, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/jof6030099

Keywords

Candida; farnesol; tyrosol; biofilm; therapy; combination

Funding

  1. FEMS Research and Training Grant [EFOP-3.6.3-VEKOP-16-2017-00009]
  2. [FEMS-GO-2019-502]

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The number of effective therapeutic strategies against biofilms is limited; development of novel therapies is urgently needed to treat a variety of biofilm-associated infections. Quorum sensing is a special form of microbial cell-to-cell communication that is responsible for the release of numerous extracellular molecules, whose concentration is proportional with cell density.Candida-secreted quorum-sensing molecules (i.e., farnesol and tyrosol) have a pivotal role in morphogenesis, biofilm formation, and virulence. Farnesol can mediate the hyphae-to-yeast transition, while tyrosol has the opposite effect of inducing transition from the yeast to hyphal form. A number of questions regardingCandidaquorum sensing remain to be addressed; nevertheless, the literature shows that farnesol and tyrosol possess remarkable antifungal and anti-biofilm effect at supraphysiological concentration. Furthermore, previous in vitro and in vivo data suggest that they may have a potent adjuvant effect in combination with certain traditional antifungal agents. This review discusses the most promising farnesol- and tyrosol-based in vitro and in vivo results, which may be a foundation for future development of novel therapeutic strategies to combatCandidabiofilms.

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