scholarly journals Susceptibility to Medium-Chain Fatty Acids Is Associated with Trisomy of Chromosome 7 in Candida albicans

mSphere ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 4 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Qinxi Ma ◽  
Mihaela Ola ◽  
Elise Iracane ◽  
Geraldine Butler

Aneuploidy (changes in chromosome number) and loss of heterozygosity (LOH) occur frequently in the human-pathogenic yeastCandida albicansand are associated with adaptation to stress and to antifungal drugs. Aneuploidy and LOH can also be induced during laboratory manipulations, such as during genetic transformation. We find thatC. albicansstrain SN152, commonly used to generate gene deletions, has undergone a major LOH event on chromosome 2. One deletion strain generated in this background has acquired extra copies of chromosomes 5 and 7. We find that trisomy (three copies) of chromosome 7 is associated with sensitivity to fatty acids.

mBio ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 3 (6) ◽  
Author(s):  
Doblin Sandai ◽  
Zhikang Yin ◽  
Laura Selway ◽  
David Stead ◽  
Janet Walker ◽  
...  

ABSTRACTMicrobes must assimilate carbon to grow and colonize their niches. Transcript profiling has suggested thatCandida albicans, a major pathogen of humans, regulates its carbon assimilation in an analogous fashion to the model yeastSaccharomyces cerevisiae, repressing metabolic pathways required for the use of alterative nonpreferred carbon sources when sugars are available. However, we show that there is significant dislocation between the proteome and transcriptome inC. albicans. Glucose triggers the degradation of theICL1andPCK1transcripts inC. albicans, yet isocitrate lyase (Icl1) and phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase (Pck1) are stable and are retained. Indeed, numerous enzymes required for the assimilation of carboxylic and fatty acids are not degraded in response to glucose. However, when expressed inC. albicans,S. cerevisiaeIcl1 (ScIcl1) is subjected to glucose-accelerated degradation, indicating that likeS. cerevisiae, this pathogen has the molecular apparatus required to execute ubiquitin-dependent catabolite inactivation.C. albicansIcl1 (CaIcl1) lacks analogous ubiquitination sites and is stable under these conditions, but the addition of a ubiquitination site programs glucose-accelerated degradation of CaIcl1. Also, catabolite inactivation is slowed inC. albicans ubi4cells. Ubiquitination sites are present in gluconeogenic and glyoxylate cycle enzymes fromS. cerevisiaebut absent from theirC. albicanshomologues. We conclude that evolutionary rewiring of ubiquitination targets has meant that following glucose exposure,C. albicansretains key metabolic functions, allowing it to continue to assimilate alternative carbon sources. This metabolic flexibility may be critical during infection, facilitating the rapid colonization of dynamic host niches containing complex arrays of nutrients.IMPORTANCEPathogenic microbes must assimilate a range of carbon sources to grow and colonize their hosts. Current views about carbon assimilation in the pathogenic yeastCandida albicansare strongly influenced by theSaccharomyces cerevisiaeparadigm in which cells faced with choices of nutrients first use energetically favorable sugars, degrading enzymes required for the assimilation of less favorable alternative carbon sources. We show that this is not the case inC. albicansbecause there has been significant evolutionary rewiring of the molecular signals that promote enzyme degradation in response to glucose. As a result, this major pathogen of humans retains enzymes required for the utilization of physiologically relevant carbon sources such as lactic acid and fatty acids, allowing it to continue to use these host nutrients even when glucose is available. This phenomenon probably enhances efficient colonization of host niches where sugars are only transiently available.


2011 ◽  
Vol 10 (8) ◽  
pp. 1004-1012 ◽  
Author(s):  
Julie Shareck ◽  
Pierre Belhumeur

ABSTRACTThe pathogenic yeastCandida albicans, a member of the mucosal microbiota, is responsible for a large spectrum of infections, ranging from benign thrush and vulvovaginitis in both healthy and immunocompromised individuals to severe, life-threatening infections in immunocompromised patients. A striking feature ofC. albicansis its ability to grow as budding yeast and as filamentous forms, including hyphae and pseudohyphae. The yeast-to-hypha transition contributes to the overall virulence ofC. albicansand may even constitute a target for the development of antifungal drugs. Indeed, impairing morphogenesis inC. albicanshas been shown to be a means to treat candidiasis. Additionally, a large number of small molecules such as farnesol, fatty acids, rapamycin, geldanamycin, histone deacetylase inhibitors, and cell cycle inhibitors have been reported to modulate the yeast-to-hypha transition inC. albicans. In this minireview, we take a look at molecules that modulate morphogenesis in this pathogenic yeast. When possible, we address experimental findings regarding their mechanisms of action and their therapeutic potential. We discuss whether or not modulating morphogenesis constitutes a strategy to treatCandidainfections.


mSphere ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 4 (5) ◽  
Author(s):  
Suresh Ambati ◽  
Emma C. Ellis ◽  
Jianfeng Lin ◽  
Xiaorong Lin ◽  
Zachary A. Lewis ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT Candida albicans, Cryptococcus neoformans, and Aspergillus fumigatus cause life-threatening candidiasis, cryptococcosis, and aspergillosis, resulting in several hundred thousand deaths annually. The patients at the greatest risk of developing these life-threatening invasive fungal infections have weakened immune systems. The vulnerable population is increasing due to rising numbers of immunocompromised individuals as a result of HIV infection or immunosuppressed individuals receiving anticancer therapies and/or stem cell or organ transplants. While patients are treated with antifungals such as amphotericin B, all antifungals have serious limitations due to lack of sufficient fungicidal effect and/or host toxicity. Even with treatment, 1-year survival rates are low. We explored methods of increasing drug effectiveness by designing fungicide-loaded liposomes specifically targeted to fungal cells. Most pathogenic fungi are encased in cell walls and exopolysaccharide matrices rich in mannans. Dectin-2 is a mammalian innate immune membrane receptor that binds as a dimer to mannans and signals fungal infection. We coated amphotericin-loaded liposomes with monomers of Dectin-2’s mannan-binding domain, sDectin-2. sDectin monomers were free to float in the lipid membrane and form dimers that bind mannan substrates. sDectin-2-coated liposomes bound orders of magnitude more efficiently to the extracellular matrices of several developmental stages of C. albicans, C. neoformans, and A. fumigatus than untargeted control liposomes. Dectin-2-coated amphotericin B-loaded liposomes reduced the growth and viability of all three species more than an order of magnitude more efficiently than untargeted control liposomes and dramatically decreased the effective dose. Future efforts focus on examining pan-antifungal targeted liposomal drugs in animal models of fungal diseases. IMPORTANCE Invasive fungal diseases caused by Candida albicans, Cryptococcus neoformans, and Aspergillus fumigatus have mortality rates ranging from 10 to 95%. Individual patient costs may exceed $100,000 in the United States. All antifungals in current use have serious limitations due to host toxicity and/or insufficient fungal cell killing that results in recurrent infections. Few new antifungal drugs have been introduced in the last 2 decades. Hence, there is a critical need for improved antifungal therapeutics. By targeting antifungal-loaded liposomes to α-mannans in the extracellular matrices secreted by these fungi, we dramatically reduced the effective dose of drug. Dectin-2-coated liposomes loaded with amphotericin B bound 50- to 150-fold more strongly to C. albicans, C. neoformans, and A. fumigatus than untargeted liposomes and killed these fungi more than an order of magnitude more efficiently. Targeting drug-loaded liposomes specifically to fungal cells has the potential to greatly enhance the efficacy of most antifungal drugs.


mSphere ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 5 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Anaïs Burgain ◽  
Faiza Tebbji ◽  
Inès Khemiri ◽  
Adnane Sellam

ABSTRACT Hypoxia is the predominant condition that the human opportunistic fungus Candida albicans encounters in the majority of the colonized niches within the host. So far, the impact of such a condition on the overall metabolism of this important human-pathogenic yeast has not been investigated. Here, we have undertaken a time-resolved metabolomics analysis to uncover the metabolic landscape of fungal cells experiencing hypoxia. Our data showed a dynamic reprogramming of many fundamental metabolic pathways, such as glycolysis, the pentose phosphate pathway, and different metabolic routes related to fungal cell wall biogenesis. The C. albicans lipidome was highly affected by oxygen depletion, with an increased level of free fatty acids and biochemical intermediates of membrane lipids, including phospholipids, lysophospholipids, sphingolipids, and mevalonate. The depletion of oxygen-dependent lipids such as ergosterol or phosphatidylcholine with longer and polyunsaturated lateral fatty acid chains was observed only at the later hypoxic time point (180 min). Transcriptomics data supported the main metabolic response to hypoxia when matched to our metabolomic profiles. The hypoxic metabolome reflected different physiological alterations of the cell wall and plasma membrane of C. albicans under an oxygen-limiting environment that were confirmed by different approaches. This study provided a framework for future in vivo investigations to examine relevant hypoxic metabolic trajectories in fungal virulence and fitness within the host. IMPORTANCE A critical aspect of cell fitness is the ability to sense and adapt to variations in oxygen levels in their local environment. Candida albicans is an opportunistic yeast that is the most prevalent human fungal pathogen. While hypoxia is the predominant condition that C. albicans encounters in most of its niches, its impact on fungal metabolism remains unexplored so far. Here, we provided a detailed landscape of the C. albicans metabolome that emphasized the importance of many metabolic routes for the adaptation of this yeast to oxygen depletion. The fungal hypoxic metabolome identified in this work provides a framework for future investigations to assess the contribution of relevant metabolic pathways in the fitness of C. albicans and other human eukaryotic pathogens with similar colonized human niches. As hypoxia is present at most of the fungal infection foci in the host, hypoxic metabolic pathways are thus an attractive target for antifungal therapy.


1999 ◽  
Vol 43 (4) ◽  
pp. 763-768 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kien C. Ha ◽  
Theodore C. White

ABSTRACT Oral infections caused by the yeast Candida albicansare some of the most frequent and earliest opportunistic infections in human immunodeficiency virus-infected patients. The widespread use of azole antifungal drugs has led to the development of drug resistance, creating a major problem in the treatment of yeast infections in AIDS patients and other immunocompromised individuals. Several molecular mechanisms that contribute to drug resistance have been identified. InC. albicans, the ability to morphologically switch from yeast cells (blastospores) to filamentous forms (hyphae) is an important virulence factor which contributes to the dissemination ofCandida in host tissues and which promotes infection and invasion. A positive correlation between the level of antifungal drug resistance and the ability to form hyphae in the presence of azole drugs has been identified. Under hypha-inducing conditions in the presence of an azole drug, resistant clinical isolates form hyphae, while susceptible yeast isolates do not. This correlation is observed in a random sample from a population of susceptible and resistant isolates and is independent of the mechanisms of resistance.35S-methionine incorporation suggests that growth inhibition is not sufficient to explain the inhibition of hyphal formation, but it may contribute to this inhibition.


2011 ◽  
Vol 10 (8) ◽  
pp. 1110-1121 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sabrina Schubert ◽  
Christina Popp ◽  
P. David Rogers ◽  
Joachim Morschhäuser

ABSTRACTThe overexpression of theMDR1gene, which encodes a multidrug efflux pump of the major facilitator superfamily, is a frequent cause of resistance to the widely used antimycotic agent fluconazole and other toxic compounds in the pathogenic yeastCandida albicans. The zinc cluster transcription factor Mrr1 controlsMDR1expression in response to inducing chemicals, and gain-of-function mutations inMRR1are responsible for the constitutiveMDR1upregulation in fluconazole-resistantC. albicansstrains. To understand how Mrr1 activity is regulated, we identified functional domains of this transcription factor. A hybrid protein consisting of the N-terminal 106 amino acids of Mrr1 and the transcriptional activation domain of Gal4 fromSaccharomyces cerevisiaeconstitutively inducedMDR1expression, demonstrating that the DNA binding domain is sufficient to target Mrr1 to theMDR1promoter. Using a series of C-terminal truncations and systematic internal deletions, we could show that Mrr1 contains multiple activation and inhibitory domains. One activation domain (AD1) is located in the C terminus of Mrr1. When fused to the tetracycline repressor TetR, this distal activation domain induced gene expression from a TetR-dependent promoter. The deletion of an inhibitory region (ID1) located near the distal activation domain resulted in constitutive activity of Mrr1. The additional removal of AD1 abolished the constitutive activity, but the truncated Mrr1 still could activate theMDR1promoter in response to the inducer benomyl. These results demonstrate that the activity of Mrr1 is regulated in multiple ways and provide insights into the function of an important mediator of drug resistance inC. albicans.


2015 ◽  
Vol 59 (6) ◽  
pp. 3460-3468 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rui Li ◽  
Sumant Puri ◽  
Swetha Tati ◽  
Paul J. Cullen ◽  
Mira Edgerton

ABSTRACTCandida albicansis a major etiological organism for oropharyngeal candidiasis (OPC), while salivary histatin 5 (Hst 5) is a human fungicidal protein that protects the oral cavity from OPC.C. albicanssenses its environment by mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) activation that can also modulate the activity of some antifungal drugs, including Hst 5. We found that phosphorylation of the MAPK Cek1, induced either byN-acetylglucosamine (GlcNAc) or serum, or its constitutive activation by deletion of its phosphatase Cpp1 elevated the susceptibility ofC. albicanscells to Hst 5. Cek1 phosphorylation but not hyphal formation was needed for increased Hst 5 sensitivity. Interference with the Cek1 pathway by deletion of its head sensor proteins, Msb2 and Sho1, or by addition of secreted aspartyl protease (SAP) cleavage inhibitors, such as pepstatin A, reduced Hst 5 susceptibility under Cek1-inducing conditions. Changes in fungal cell surface glycostructures also modulated Hst 5 sensitivity, and Cek1-inducing conditions resulted in a higher uptake rate of Hst 5. These results show that there is a consistent relationship between activation of Cek1 MAPK and increased Hst 5 susceptibility inC. albicans.


Author(s):  
Karen Kubo ◽  
Kaori Itto-Nakama ◽  
Shinsuke Ohnuki ◽  
Yoko Yashiroda ◽  
Sheena C. Li ◽  
...  

Non- Candida albicans Candida species (NCAC) are on the rise as a cause of mycosis. Many antifungal drugs are less effective against NCAC, limiting the available therapeutic agents.


mSphere ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bernardo Ramírez-Zavala ◽  
Austin Mottola ◽  
Ines Krüger ◽  
Joachim Morschhäuser

The highly conserved protein kinase SNF1 plays a key role in the metabolic adaptation of the pathogenic yeast Candida albicans , but it is not clear how it regulates its downstream targets in this fungus. We show that the repressor proteins Mig1 and Mig2 are phosphorylated also in cells lacking the catalytic α-subunit Snf1 of the SNF1 complex, but the amounts of both proteins were reduced in wild-type cells when glucose was replaced by alternative carbon sources, pointing to an indirect mechanism of regulation.


mSphere ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 4 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Timea Marton ◽  
Adeline Feri ◽  
Pierre-Henri Commere ◽  
Corinne Maufrais ◽  
Christophe d’Enfert ◽  
...  

ABSTRACTThe heterozygous diploid genome ofCandida albicansis highly plastic, with frequent loss of heterozygosity (LOH) events. In the SC5314 laboratory strain, while LOH events are ubiquitous, a chromosome homozygosis bias is observed for certain chromosomes, whereby only one of the two homologs can occur in the homozygous state. This suggests the occurrence of recessive lethal allele(s) (RLA) preventing large-scale LOH events on these chromosomes from being stably maintained. To verify the presence of an RLA on chromosome 7 (Chr7), we utilized a system that allows (i) DNA double-strand break (DSB) induction on Chr7 by the I-SceI endonuclease and (ii) detection of the resulting long-range homozygosis. I-SceI successfully induced a DNA DSB on both Chr7 homologs, generally repaired by gene conversion. Notably, cells homozygous for the right arm of Chr7B were not recovered, confirming the presence of RLA(s) in this region. Genome data mining for RLA candidates identified a premature nonsense-generating single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) within the HapB allele of C7_03400c whoseSaccharomycescerevisiaeortholog encodes the essential Mtr4 RNA helicase. Complementation with a wild-type copy ofMTR4rescued cells homozygous for the right arm of Chr7B, demonstrating that themtr4K880*RLA is responsible for the Chr7 homozygosis bias in strain SC5314. Furthermore, we observed that the major repeat sequences (MRS) on Chr7 acted as hot spots for interhomolog recombination. Such recombination events provideC. albicanswith increased opportunities to survive DNA DSBs whose repair can lead to homozygosis of recessive lethal or deleterious alleles. This might explain the maintenance of MRS in this species.IMPORTANCECandida albicansis a major fungal pathogen, whose mode of reproduction is mainly clonal. Its genome is highly tolerant to rearrangements, in particular loss of heterozygosity events, known to unmask recessive lethal and deleterious alleles in heterozygous diploid organisms such asC. albicans. By combining a site-specific DSB-inducing system and mining genome sequencing data of 182 C. albicansisolates, we were able to ascribe the chromosome 7 homozygosis bias of theC. albicanslaboratory strain SC5314 to an heterozygous SNP introducing a premature STOP codon in theMTR4gene. We have also proposed genome-wide candidates for new recessive lethal alleles. We additionally observed that the major repeat sequences (MRS) on chromosome 7 acted as hot spots for interhomolog recombination. Maintaining MRS inC. albicanscould favor haplotype exchange, of vital importance to LOH events, leading to homozygosis of recessive lethal or deleterious alleles that inevitably accumulate upon clonality.


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