The invention chimeric organism comprises a chimeric surface integrin-like fusion
protein in which the I domain has been replaced by an antibody fragment that binds
a disease-associated antigen on a cell. Binding of the antibody fragment to the
disease-associated antigen triggers virulent transformation of the chimeric pathogenic
organism so as to cause the organism to infiltrate the target cell with specificity.
Preferably, the chimeric organism is a chimeric pathogenic C. albicans having
an INT1 fusion protein in which the I domain is replaced by an antibody fragment,
preferably a single chain antibody, and in which expression of an iron transporter
gene necessary for infiltration of a target cell is triggered under the control
of a EFG1p response element. Binding of the antibody to the disease-associated
antigen causes filamentous transformation in the chimeric pathogenic C. albicans
and specific infiltration of target cells. The invention chimeric pathogenic
organisms are used in therapeutic methods to specifically infiltrate and destroy
diseased cells to which the antibody fragment binds while remaining non-pathogenic
to normal cells.