Candida albicans, the most prevalent fungal pathogen of humans, has recently been shown to undergo mating. Here we describe a mating pheromone produced by C. albicans ␣ cells and show that the gene which encodes it (MF␣) is required for ␣ cells, but not a cells, to mate. We also identify the receptor for this mating pheromone as the product of the STE2 gene and show that this gene is required for the mating of a cells, but not ␣ cells. Cells of the a mating type respond to the ␣ mating pheromone by producing long polarized projections, similar to those observed in bona fide mating mixtures of C. albicans a and ␣ cells. During this process, transcription of approximately 62 genes is induced. Although some of these genes correspond to those induced in Saccharomyces cerevisiae by S. cerevisiae ␣-factor, most are specific to the C. albicans pheromone response. The most surprising class encode cell surface and secreted proteins previously implicated in virulence of C. albicans in a mouse model of disseminated candidiasis. This observation suggests that aspects of cell-cell communication in mating may have been evolutionarily adopted for host-pathogen interactions in C. albicans.Candida albicans is the most common fungal pathogen in humans and is responsible for a wide variety of mucosal and systemic infections (9). Two aspects of C. albicans biology are examined in this paper. The first is a group of hypha-specific gene products required for full virulence in a disseminated model of candidiasis. These genes include HWP1 (whose product is required for efficient attachment to epithelial cells) (38), SAP4, SAP5, and SAP6 (which encode aspartyl proteases required for tissue invasion) (6, 12), RBT1 and ECE1 (which encode cell surface proteins of unknown function), and RBT4