Pneumocystis spp. are obligate fungal pathogens that cause a fatal pneumonia (PCP) in immunocompromised hosts. Few drugs are effective against PCP and there have been no new therapies for its treatment in decades. Typically, PCP has been associated with patients infected with HIV, however, the fulminate pneumonia, PCP, and colonization with Pneumocystis jirovecii (the species infecting humans) are emerging clinical problems in newly susceptible populations in the general and veterans’ populations including bone marrow recipients; patients receiving chronic immunotherapy for rheumatoid arthritis and other chronic inflammatory diseases; and cancer chemo- and immunotherapies. The life cycle of Pneumocystis is suggested to contain both an asexual replication cycle and a sexual cycle involving mating with subsequent formation of asci containing 8 ascospores (1). During the previous Merit Review, we showed that echinocandin treatment of rodents infected with P. murina and P. carinii, which target β-1,3-D-glucan synthesis (BG), depleted the asci which contain BG but large numbers of non-BG expressing life cycle stages remained in the lungs and were unable to proliferate. We further demonstrated that anidulafungin and caspofungin could prevent infection in a prophylactic model, suggesting that formation of asci via the sexual cycle may be required for a productive infection (2). Analysis of gene expression profiles of P. murina in mice treated with anidulafungin, showed strong upregulation of genes associated with sexual replication, though the resulting infections were devoid of asci, the product of sexual reproduction, suggesting that P. murina attempted to undergo sexual replication, but could not due to a lack of BG. Based on these data, we posit that asci, and thus sexual replication, is required to facilitate progression through the life cycle leading to a productive infection. We further posit that presence of asci is required for transmission of Pneumocystis infection. In the present proposal, we will explore 2 critical, but unanswered questions that will lead to a deeper knowledge of the life cycle of Pneumocystis, and also suggest potential vulnerabilities for targeted treatment concomitant with anidulafungin therapy: (1) Is sexual replication required for completion of the life cycle of Pneumocystis? Tracking of the replication status of P. murina during prolonged treatment with anidulafungin by global gene analysis, BG content, and microscopic methods will reveal whether the non-BG expressing forms numbers remain: 1) static over time, 2) increase, or 3) decrease; suggesting: 1) the lack of BG blocks replication; 2) that an asexual or alternative replication phase permits survival of the fungi; or 3) the lack of sexual replication results in elimination of the infection. (2) Can sexual replication rebound after cessation of prolonged anidulafungin treatment? Mice will be treated with anidulafungin for up to 8 weeks, with 2 cessation time point...