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Same-sex action helps thrush yeast thrive

Candida albicans cells can reproduce homosexually, which could help explain how the yeast develops resistance to treatment

A YEAST responsible for thrush can reproduce homosexually – potentially explaining ways it develops resistance to treatment.

When Candida albicans cells reproduce by mating, they have two sex types, “a” and “alpha”. Richard Bennett of Brown University in Providence, Rhode Island, and his colleagues mixed the two types and saw matings between same-sex cells, but only a few (Nature, ).

They saw many more when they boosted a pheromone secreted by “a” cells that draws same-sex cells together. They did this by disabling an enzyme in “a” cells that usually destroys the “same-sex” pheromone.

Now they want to find out what could make this happen in nature, such as changes in acidity in the mouth, gut or vagina.

In 1999, a lethal strain of a related yeast, Cryptococcus neoformans, emerged on Vancouver Island in British Columbia, Canada, through same-sex mating. “The findings suggest that unisex mating may be linked to virulence,” says of Duke University in Durham, North Carolina.