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  • 1
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Oxford, UK : Blackwell Science Ltd
    Molecular microbiology 58 (2005), S. 0 
    ISSN: 1365-2958
    Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Candida albicans strains that are homozygous at the mating type locus (MTLa or MTLα) can spontaneously switch from the normal round-to-oval yeast cell morphology to an elongated, so-called opaque cell form that can mate with opaque cells of the opposite mating type. In response to environmental signals, C. albicans also undergoes a transition from yeast to filamentous growth, which is negatively regulated by the general repressor Tup1p. Therefore, C. albicans mutants in which the TUP1 gene is inactivated grow constitutively in the filamentous form. We found that tup1Δ mutants of the MTLα strain WO-1 are still able to undergo phenotypic switching. Although the mutants had lost the capacity to grow in the normal yeast (white) or opaque forms, they could still reversibly switch between four different cell and colony phenotypes (designated as fuzzy, frizzy, wrinkled and smooth) at a frequency of about 10−3 to 10−4. Deletion of TUP1 resulted in deregulated expression of phase-specific genes. While the white-specific WH11 gene was constitutively expressed in all four cell types, the opaque-specific SAP1 gene remained repressed and the opaque-specific OP4 gene was weakly induced in all phase variants. In spite of the loss of white- and opaque-specific cell morphology and gene expression, the tup1Δ mutants retained an important characteristic of their wild-type parent, the ability to switch to a mating-competent form. The three filamentous phase variants (fuzzy, frizzy and wrinkled) all were able to mate and produce recombinant progeny with opaque cells of an MTLa strain at frequencies that were somewhat lower than those of normal opaque cells, whereas the smooth phase variant was unable to do so. Therefore, although deletion of TUP1 in C. albicans MTLα cells affects cellular morphology and gene expression patterns, the mutants can still reversibly switch between mating-competent and -incompetent cell types and mate with a partner of the opposite mating type.
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  • 2
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Oxford, UK : Blackwell Publishing Ltd
    FEMS microbiology letters 153 (1997), S. 0 
    ISSN: 1574-6968
    Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Candida albicans infections in severely immunocompromized patients are not confined to mucosal surfaces; instead the fungus can invade through epithelial and endothelial layers into the bloodstream and spread to other organs, causing disseminated infections with often fatal outcome. We investigated whether secretion of the C. albicans acid proteinase facilitates invasion into deeper tissues by degrading the subendothelial basement membrane. After cultivation under conditions that induce the secretion of the acid proteinase, C. albicans degraded radioactively metabolically labeled extracellular matrix proteins from a human endothelial cell line. The degradation was inhibited in the presence of pepstatin A, an inhibitor of acid proteinases. Pepstatin A-sensitive degradation of the soluble and immobilized extracellular matrix proteins fibronectin and laminin by proteinase-producing C. albicans was also detected, whereas no degradation was observed when the expression of the acid proteinase was repressed. Our results demonstrate that the C. albicans acid proteinase degrades human subendothelial extracellular matrix; this may be of importance in the penetration of C. albicans into circulation and deep organs.
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  • 3
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Oxford, UK : Blackwell Science Ltd
    Molecular microbiology 56 (2005), S. 0 
    ISSN: 1365-2958
    Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Nitrogen starvation is one of the signals that induce Candida albicans, the major fungal pathogen of humans, to switch from yeast to filamentous growth. In response to nitrogen starvation, C. albicans expresses the MEP1 and MEP2 genes, which encode two ammonium permeases that enable growth when limiting concentrations of ammonium are the only available nitrogen source. In addition to its role as an ammonium transporter, Mep2p, but not Mep1p, also has a central function in the induction of filamentous growth on a solid surface under limiting nitrogen conditions. When ammonium is absent or present at low concentrations, Mep2p activates both the Cph1p-dependent mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase pathway and the cAMP-dependent signalling pathway in a Ras1p-dependent fashion via its C-terminal cytoplasmic tail, which is essential for signalling but dispensable for ammonium transport. In contrast, under ammonium-replete conditions that require transporter-mediated uptake Mep2p is engaged in ammonium transport and signalling is blocked such that C. albicans continues to grow in the budding yeast form. Mep2p is a less efficient ammonium transporter than Mep1p and is expressed at much higher levels, a distinguishing feature that is important for its signalling function. At sufficiently high concentrations, ammonium represses filamentous growth even when the signalling pathways are artificially activated. Therefore, C. albicans has established a regulatory circuit in which a preferred nitrogen source, ammonium, also serves as an inhibitor of morphogenesis that is taken up into the cell by the same transporter that mediates the induction of filamentous growth in response to nitrogen starvation.
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  • 4
    ISSN: 1365-2958
    Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Candida albicans and Candida dubliniensis are opportunistic fungal pathogens that are closely related but differ in their epidemiology and in some phenotypic characteristics, including certain virulence-related traits. A comparison of these two species at the molecular level could therefore provide new insights into the biology and pathogenicity of Candida. Both species share the ability to produce chlamydospores, but only C. dubliniensis forms pseudohyphae with abundant chlamydospores on Staib agar (syn. Guizotia abyssinica creatinine agar), on which C. albicans grows as a budding yeast. To understand the basis of this species-specific, differential regulation of morphogenetic development, we set out to identify C. albicans genes that repress chlamydospore formation under these conditions. A C. albicans genomic library was integrated into the C. dubliniensis genome and transformants were screened for clones in which filamentation and/or chlamydospore production on Staib agar was suppressed. This screen identified two genes, CaNRG1 and CaPDE2, encoding a general transcriptional repressor and a high affinity cAMP phosphodiesterase, respectively. Expression of CaNRG1 in C. dubliniensis repressed pseudohyphae and chlamydospore formation, whereas expression of CaPDE2 only reduced the extent of filamentous growth but did not affect chlamydospore formation. We found that C. dubliniensis, but not C. albicans, specifically downregulates NRG1 expression on Staib medium to allow chlamydospore development. Artificial overexpression of CdNRG1 suppressed pseudohyphal growth and production of chlamydospores in C. dubliniensis. Conversely, deletion of CaNRG1 in C. albicans resulted in chlamydospore formation on Staib agar, confirming its central role in the regulation of this morphogenetic process. Our results demonstrate that differential regulation of a single gene, NRG1, in C. albicans and C. dubliniensis is responsible for their species-specific response to environmental signals that induce chlamydospore development.
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  • 5
    ISSN: 1365-2958
    Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: The yeast Candida albicans is the most important fungal pathogen of humans and a model organism for studying fungal virulence. Sequencing of the C. albicans genome will soon be completed, allowing systematic approaches to analyse gene function. However, techniques to define and characterize essential genes in this permanently diploid yeast are limited. We have developed an efficient method to create conditional lethal C. albicans null mutants by inducible, FLP-mediated gene deletion. Both wild-type alleles of the CDC42 or the BEM1 gene were deleted in strains that carried an additional copy of the respective gene that could be excised from the genome by the site-specific recombinase FLP. Expression of a C. albicans-adapted FLP gene under the control of an inducible promoter generated cell populations consisting of ≥99.9% null mutants. Upon plating, these cells were unable to form colonies, demonstrating that CDC42 and BEM1 are essential genes in C. albicans. The cdc42 null mutants failed to produce buds and hyphae and grew as large, round cells instead, suggesting that they lacked the ability to produce polarized cell growth. However, the cells still responded to hyphal inducing signals by ag-gregating and expressing hypha-specific genes, behaviours typical of the mycelial growth form of C. albicans. Budding cells and germ tubes of bem1 null mutants exhibited morphological abnormalities, demonstrating that BEM1 is essential for normal growth of both yeast and hyphae. Inducible, FLP-mediated gene deletion provides a powerful approach to generate conditional lethal C. albicans mutants and allows the functional analysis of essential genes.
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  • 6
    ISSN: 1365-2958
    Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: The yeast Candida albicans is a harmless colonizer of mucosal surfaces in healthy people but can become a serious pathogen in immunocompromised patients, causing superficial as well as systemic infections. The evolution of gene families encoding pathogenicity-related functions, like adhesins and secreted aspartic proteinases (Saps), which are differentially induced by host signals at various stages of colonization and infection, may have allowed C. albicans an optimal adaptation to many different host niches. We found that even the two alleles of a single gene can be differentially regulated in the diploid C. albicans. In the model strain SC5314, the in vitro expression of one of the two SAP2 alleles, SAP2-1, depended on the presence of a functional SAP2-2 allele. In contrast, inactivation of SAP2-1 did not in-fluence the expression of SAP2-2. The proteinase encoded by the SAP2-2 allele serves as a signal sensor and amplifier to enhance its own expression as well as to induce the SAP2-1 allele to achieve maximal proteolytic activity under appropriate conditions. Using in vivo expression technology, we could demonstrate that the SAP2-1 allele is significantly activated only in the late stages of systemic candidiasis in mice, whereas the SAP2-2 allele is induced much earlier. The differential regulation of the two SAP2 alleles was due to differences in their pro-moters, which contained a variable number of two pentameric nucleotide repeats. Mutations that re-duced or increased the copy number of these repeats diminished the inducibility of the SAP2 promoter during infection but not in vitro, suggesting that the mutations affected interactions of regulatory factors that are necessary for SAP2 activation in vivo but dispensable for its induction in vitro. Therefore, the signals and signal transduction pathways that mediate SAP2 expression within certain host niches may differ from those that activate the gene in vitro. In addition to the generation of gene families whose members exhibit functional and regulatory diversification, C. albicans seems to use its diploid genome to create further variability and host adaptation by differential evolution of even the two alleles of a single gene.
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  • 7
    ISSN: 1365-2958
    Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: The uropathogenic Escherichia coli strain 536 possesses two large, unstable DNA regions on its chromosome, which were termed pathogenicity islands (pais). Deletions of pais, which occur with relatively high frequency in vitro and in vivo, lead to avirulent mutants. The genetic determinants for production of haemolysin (Hly) and P-related fimbriae (Prf) are located in one of these islands. Deletion of this pathogenicity isiand (paill) not only removes the hly- and prf-specific genes, but also represses S fimbriae (Sfa), although the sfa genes of this virulence factor are not located on paill. We have identified two regulatory genes, prfB and prfl, of the prf gene cluster that are homologous to the sfa regulatory genes staB and SfaC, respectively. Mutations in sfaB and sfaC that inhibit transcription of the major fimbrial subunit gene sfaA were complemented by the homologous prf genes, suggesting communication between the two fimbrial gene clusters in the wild-type strain. Chromosomal mutagenesis of the two prf regulators in strain 536 repressed transcription of sfaA, detected by Northern hybridization and a chromosomal sfaA-lacZ fusion. In addition, haemagglutination assays measured a lower level of S fimbriae in these mutants. Expression of the cloned prf regulators in trans reversed the effect of the mutations; furthermore, constitutive expression of prfB or prfl could also overcome the repression of S fimbriae in a strain that had lost the pathogenicity islands. Virulence assays in mice established that the prf mutants were less virulent than the wild-type strain. The results demonstrate that cross-regulation of two unlinked virulence gene clusters together with the co-ordinate loss of large DNA regions significantly influences the virulence of an extraintestinal E. coli wild-type isolate.
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  • 8
    ISSN: 1365-2958
    Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: An understanding of the complex interactions between pathogenic microbes and their host must include the identification of gene expression patterns during infection. To detect the activation of virulence genes in the opportunistic fungal pathogen Candida albicans in vivo by host signals, we devised a reporter system that is based on FLP-mediated genetic recombination. The FLP gene, encoding the site-specific recombinase FLP, was genetically modified for expression in C. albicans and fused to the promoter of the SAP2 gene that codes for one of the secreted aspartic proteinases, which are putative virulence factors of C. albicans. The SAP2P–FLP fusion was integrated into one of the SAP2 alleles in a strain that contained a deletable marker that conferred resistance to mycophenolic acid and was flanked by direct repeats of the FLP recognition target (FRT). Using this reporter system, a transient gene induction could be monitored at the level of single cells by the mycophenolic acid-sensitive phenotype of the colonies generated from such cells after FLP-mediated marker excision. In two mouse models of disseminated candidiasis, SAP2 expression was not observed in the initial phase of infection, but the SAP2 gene was strongly induced after dissemination into deep organs. In contrast, in a mouse model of oesophageal candidiasis in which dissemination into internal organs did not occur, no SAP2 expression was detected at any time. Our results support a role of the SAP2 gene in the late stages of an infection, after fungal spread into deep tissue. This new in vivo expression technology (IVET) for a human fungal pathogen allows the detection of virulence gene induction at different stages of an infection, and therefore provides clues about the role of these genes in the disease process.
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  • 9
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Oxford BSL : Blackwell Science Ltd
    Molecular microbiology 32 (1999), S. 0 
    ISSN: 1365-2958
    Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: The genetic manipulation of the human fungal pathogen Candida albicans is difficult because of its diploid genome, the lack of a known sexual phase and its unusual codon usage. We devised a new method for sequential gene disruption in C. albicans that is based on the repeated use of the URA3 marker for selection of transformants and its subsequent deletion by FLP-mediated, site-specific recombination. A cassette was constructed that, in addition to the URA3 selection marker, contained an inducible SAP2P–FLP fusion and was flanked by direct repeats of the minimal FLP recognition site (FRT). This URA3 flipper cassette was used to generate homozygous C. albicans mutants disrupted for both alleles of either the CDR4 gene, encoding an ABC transporter, or the MDR1 gene, encoding a membrane transport protein of the major facilitator superfamily. After insertion of the URA3 flipper into the first copy of the target gene, the whole cassette could be efficiently excised by induced FLP-mediated recombination, leaving one FRT site in the disrupted allele of the target gene. The URA3 flipper was then used for another round of mutagenesis to disrupt the second allele. Deletion of the cassette from primary and secondary transformants occurred exclusively by intrachromosomal recombination of the FRT sites flanking the URA3 flipper, whereas interchromosomal recombination between FRT sites on the homologous chromosomes was never observed. This new gene disruption strategy facilitates the generation of specific, homozygous C. albicans mutants as it eliminates the need for a negative selection scheme for marker deletion and minimizes the risk of mitotic recombination in sequential disruption experiments.
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  • 10
    ISSN: 1365-2958
    Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Resistance of the pathogenic yeast Candida albicans to the antifungal agent fluconazole is often caused by active drug efflux out of the cells. In clinical C. albicans strains, fluconazole resistance frequently correlates with constitutive activation of the MDR1 gene, encoding a membrane transport protein of the major facilitator superfamily that is not expressed detectably in fluconazole-susceptible isolates. However, the molecular changes causing MDR1 activation have not yet been elucidated, and direct proof for MDR1 expression being the cause of drug resistance in clinical C. albicans strains is lacking as a result of difficulties in the genetic manipulation of C. albicans wild-type strains. We have developed a new strategy for sequential gene disruption in C. albicans wild-type strains that is based on the repeated use of a dominant selection marker conferring resistance against mycophenolic acid upon transformants and its subsequent excision from the genome by FLP-mediated, site-specific recombination (MPAR-flipping). This mutagenesis strategy was used to generate homozygous mdr1/mdr1 mutants from two fluconazole-resistant clinical C. albicans isolates in which drug resistance correlated with stable, constitutive MDR1 activation. In both cases, disruption of the MDR1 gene resulted in enhanced susceptibility of the mutants against fluconazole, providing the first direct genetic proof that MDR1 mediates fluconazole resistance in clinical C. albicans strains. The new gene disruption strategy allows the generation of specific knock-out mutations in any C. albicans wild-type strain and therefore opens completely novel approaches for studying this most important human pathogenic fungus at the molecular level.
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