Abstract

Intracellular pathogens have evolved machinery to evade the immune response in order to survive within a host. Histoplasma capsulatum, one of the intracellular pathogens, is a dimorphic fungus that dodges innate and adaptive immunity; it escapes immunity presumably through virulence factors that permit fungal survival and replication within the host. This review discusses immune factors that contribute to the control of H. capsulatum infection, several host-survival mechanisms H. capsulatum uses, and new techniques that have led to the identification of several H. capsulatum virulence factors, which will most likely aid in the discovery of many more.

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