Integrative multi-omics profiling reveals cAMP-independent mechanisms regulating hyphal morphogenesis in Candida albicans (original) (raw)

Signaling through Adenylyl Cyclase Is Essential for Hyphal Growth and Virulence in the Pathogenic Fungus Candida albicans

Molecular Biology of the Cell, 2001

The human fungal pathogen Candida albicans switches from a budding yeast form to a polarized hyphal form in response to various external signals. This morphogenetic switching has been implicated in the development of pathogenicity. We have cloned the CaCDC35 gene encoding C. albicans adenylyl cyclase by functional complementation of the conditional growth defect of Saccharomyces cerevisiae cells with mutations in Ras1p and Ras2p. It has previously been shown that these Ras homologues regulate adenylyl cyclase in yeast. The C. albicans adenylyl cyclase is highly homologous to other fungal adenylyl cyclases but has less sequence similarity with the mammalian enzymes. C. albicans cells deleted for both alleles of CaCDC35 had no detectable cAMP levels, suggesting that this gene encodes the only adenylyl cyclase in C. albicans. The homozygous mutant cells were viable but grew more slowly than wild-type cells and were unable to switch from the yeast to the hyphal form under all environmental conditions that we analyzed in vitro. Moreover, this morphogenetic switch was completely blocked in mutant cells undergoing phagocytosis by macrophages. However, morphogenetic switching was restored by exogenous cAMP. On the basis of epistasis experiments, we propose that CaCdc35p acts downstream of the Ras homologue CaRas1p. These epistasis experiments also suggest that the putative transcription factor Efg1p and components of the hyphal-inducing MAP kinase pathway depend on the function of CaCdc35p in their ability to induce morphogenetic switching. Homozygous cacdc35⌬ cells were unable to establish vaginal infection in a mucosal membrane mouse model and were avirulent in a mouse model for systemic infections. These findings suggest that fungal adenylyl cyclases and other regulators of the cAMP signaling pathway may be useful targets for antifungal drugs.

Signaling through Adenylyl Cyclase Is Essential for Hyphal Growth and Virulence in the Pathogenic FungusCandida albicans

Molecular Biology of the Cell, 2001

The human fungal pathogen Candida albicans switches from a budding yeast form to a polarized hyphal form in response to various external signals. This morphogenetic switching has been implicated in the development of pathogenicity. We have cloned the CaCDC35 gene encoding C. albicans adenylyl cyclase by functional complementation of the conditional growth defect of Saccharomyces cerevisiae cells with mutations in Ras1p and Ras2p. It has previously been shown that these Ras homologues regulate adenylyl cyclase in yeast. The C. albicans adenylyl cyclase is highly homologous to other fungal adenylyl cyclases but has less sequence similarity with the mammalian enzymes. C. albicans cells deleted for both alleles of CaCDC35 had no detectable cAMP levels, suggesting that this gene encodes the only adenylyl cyclase in C. albicans. The homozygous mutant cells were viable but grew more slowly than wild-type cells and were unable to switch from the yeast to the hyphal form under all environmental conditions that we analyzed in vitro. Moreover, this morphogenetic switch was completely blocked in mutant cells undergoing phagocytosis by macrophages. However, morphogenetic switching was restored by exogenous cAMP. On the basis of epistasis experiments, we propose that CaCdc35p acts downstream of the Ras homologue CaRas1p. These epistasis experiments also suggest that the putative transcription factor Efg1p and components of the hyphal-inducing MAP kinase pathway depend on the function of CaCdc35p in their ability to induce morphogenetic switching. Homozygous cacdc35⌬ cells were unable to establish vaginal infection in a mucosal membrane mouse model and were avirulent in a mouse model for systemic infections. These findings suggest that fungal adenylyl cyclases and other regulators of the cAMP signaling pathway may be useful targets for antifungal drugs.

Characterization of a hyperactive Cyr1 mutant reveals new regulatory mechanisms for cellular cAMP levels in Candida albicans

Molecular Microbiology, 2011

The adenylyl cyclase Cyr1 plays a pivotal role in regulating virulence traits in the human fungal pathogen Candida albicans. Although a diverse range of signals are known to activate Cyr1, it remains unclear how low activity is maintained in the absence of stimuli. To uncover negative regulatory elements, we designed a genetic screen to identify mutations in Cyr1 that increase its catalytic activity. We found such a mutant carrying a single Glu1541 to Lys substitution in a conserved motif C-terminal to the catalytic domain. This E1541K mutation caused constitutive filamentous growth, hypersensitivity to stress, resistance to farnesol and overproduction of riboflavin. The mutant phenotype depends on Cap1 and Ras1, two known positive regulators of Cyr1, and the filamentous growth requires Hgc1, a key promoter of hyphal growth. Strikingly, expressing a truncated version of the mutant protein lacking the entire region N-terminal to the catalytic domain in cyr1D cells caused a fivefold increase in the cellular cAMP level. Such cells exhibited dramatic enlargement, cytokinetic defects, G1 arrest and impaired hyphal development. Thus, our studies have revealed novel regulatory elements in Cyr1 that normally repress Cyr1 activity to prevent the toxicity of unregulated high cAMP levels.

cAMP-PKA pathway to induce morphogenesis in Candida albicans

2000

Tel: +32 16 321512 Fax: +32 16 321979 Email: patrick.vandijck@bio.kuleuven.ac.be key-words: GPCR/signal transduction/yeast-to-hyphae/nutrient sensing/methionine Running title: GPCR-induced morphogenesis in C. albicans 2 Abstract We investigated the role in cell morphogenesis and pathogenicity of the Candida albicans GPR1 gene, encoding the G protein coupled receptor Gpr1. Deletion of C. albicans GPR1 has only minor effects in liquid hypha-inducing media but results in strong defects in the yeast-to-hypha transition on solid hypha-inducing media. Addition of cAMP, expression of a constitutively active allele of the Gα protein Gpa2 or of the catalytic protein kinase A subunit TPK1 restores the wild type phenotype of the CaGPR1-deleted strain. Overexpression of HST7, encoding a component of the Mitogen-Activated Protein Kinase (MAPK) pathway, does not suppress the defect in filamentation. These results indicate that CaGpr1 functions upstream in the cAMP-

Hyphal growth in Candida albicans does not require induction of hyphal-specific gene expression

Molecular biology of the cell, 2015

Various stimuli, including N-acetylglucosamine (GlcNAc), induce the fungal pathogen Candida albicans to switch from budding to hyphal growth. Previous studies suggested that hyphal morphogenesis is stimulated by transcriptional induction of a set of genes that includes known virulence factors. To better understand hyphal development, we examined the role of GlcNAc metabolism using a triple mutant lacking the genes required to metabolize exogenous GlcNAc (hxk1Δ nag1Δ dac1Δ). Surprisingly, at low ambient pH (∼pH 4), GlcNAc stimulated this mutant to form hyphae without obvious induction of hyphal genes. This indicates that GlcNAc can stimulate a separate signal to induce hyphae that is independent of transcriptional responses. Of interest, GlcNAc could induce the triple mutant to express hyphal genes when the medium was buffered to a higher pH (>pH 5), which normally occurs after GlcNAc catabolism. Catabolism of GlcNAc raises the ambient pH rather than acidifying it, as occurs after...

Transcription Profiling of Cyclic AMP Signaling in Candida albicans

Molecular Biology of the Cell, 2004

We used transcription profiling in Candida albicans to investigate cellular regulation involving cAMP. We found that many genes require the adenylyl cyclase Cdc35p for proper expression. These include genes encoding ribosomal subunit proteins and RNA polymerase subunit proteins, suggesting that growth could be controlled in part by cAMP-mediated modulation of gene expression. Other genes influenced by loss of adenylyl cyclase are involved in metabolism, the cell wall, and stress response and include a group of genes of unknown function that are unique to C. albicans. The profiles generated by loss of the adenylyl cyclase regulator Ras1p and a downstream effector Efg1p were also examined. The loss of Ras1p function disturbs the expression of a subset of the genes regulated by adenylyl cyclase, suggesting both that the primary role of Ras1p in transcriptional regulation involves its influence on the function of Cdc35p and that there are Ras1p independent roles for Cdc35p. The transcription factor Efg1p is also needed for the expression of many genes; however, these genes are distinct from those modulated by Cdc35p with the exception of a class of hyphal-specific genes. Therefore transcription profiling establishes that cAMP plays a key role in the overall regulation of gene expression in C. albicans, and enhances our detailed understanding of the circuitry controlling this regulation.

Cross regulation between Candida albicans catalytic and regulatory subunits of protein kinase A

Fungal Genetics and Biology, 2012

In the pathogen Candida albicans protein kinase A (PKA) catalytic subunit is encoded by two genes TPK1 and TPK2 and the regulatory subunit by one gene, BCY1. PKA mediates several cellular processes such as cell cycle regulation and the yeast to hyphae transition, a key factor for C. albicans virulence. The catalytic isoforms Tpk1p and Tpk2p share redundant functions in vegetative growth and hyphal development, though they differentially regulate glycogen metabolism, the stress response pathway and pseudohyphal formation. In Saccharomyces cerevisiae it was earlier reported that BCY1 overexpression not only increased the amount of TPK3 mRNA but also its catalytic activity. In C. albicans a significant decrease in Bcy1p expression levels was already observed in tpk2D null strains. In this work we showed that the upregulation in Bcy1p expression was observed in a set of strains having a TPK1 or TPK2 allele reintegrated in its own locus, as well as in strains expressing the TPKs under the control of the constitutive ACT1 promoter. To confirm the cross regulation event between Bcy1p and Tpkp expression we generated a mutant strain with the lowest PKA activity carrying one TPK1 and a unique BCY1 allele with the aim to obtain two derived strains in which BCY1 or TPK1 were placed under their own promoters inserted in the RPS10 neutral locus. We found that placing one copy of BCY1 upregulated the levels of Tpk1p and its catalytic activity; while TPK1 insertion led to an increase in BCY1 mRNA, Bcy1p and in a high cAMP binding activity. Our results suggest that C. albicans cells were able to compensate for the increased levels of either Tpk1p or Tpk2p subunits with a corresponding elevation of Bcy1 protein levels and vice versa, implying a tightly regulated mechanism to balance holoenzyme formation.

Transcriptional control of hyphal morphogenesis in Candida albicans

FEMS Yeast Research

Candida albicans is a multimorphic commensal organism and opportunistic fungal pathogen in humans. A morphological switch between unicellular budding yeast and multicellular filamentous hyphal growth forms plays a vital role in the virulence of C. albicans, and this transition is regulated in response to a range of environmental cues that are encountered in distinct host niches. Many unique transcription factors contribute to the transcriptional regulatory network that integrates these distinct environmental cues and determines which phenotypic state will be expressed. These hyphal morphogenesis regulators have been extensively investigated, and represent an increasingly important focus of study, due to their central role in controlling a key C. albicans virulence attribute. This review provides a succinct summary of the transcriptional regulatory factors and environmental signals that control hyphal morphogenesis in C. albicans.

cAMP-independent signal pathways stimulate hyphal morphogenesis inCandida albicans

Molecular Microbiology

The fungal pathogen Candida albicans can transition from budding to hyphal growth, which promotes biofilm formation and invasive growth into tissues. Stimulation of adenylyl cyclase to form cAMP induces hyphal morphogenesis. The failure of cells lacking adenylyl cyclase (cyr1Δ) to form hyphae has suggested that cAMP signaling is essential for hyphal growth. However, cyr1Δ mutants also grow slowly and have defects in morphogenesis, making it unclear whether hyphal inducers must stimulate cAMP, or if normal basal levels of cAMP are required to maintain cellular health needed for hyphal growth. Interestingly, supplementation of cyr1Δ cells with low levels of cAMP enabled them to form hyphae in response to the inducer N-acetylglucosamine (GlcNAc), suggesting that a basal level of cAMP is sufficient for stimulation. Furthermore, we isolated fastergrowing cyr1Δ pseudorevertant strains that can be induced to form hyphae even though they lack cAMP. The pseudorevertant strains were not induced by CO 2 , consistent with reports that CO 2 directly stimulates adenylyl cyclase. Mutational analysis showed that induction of hyphae in a pseudorevertant strain was independent of RAS1, but was dependent on the EFG1 transcription factor that acts downstream of protein kinase A. Thus, cAMP-independent signals contribute to the induction of hyphal responses.

The Yak1 Kinase Is Involved in the Initiation and Maintenance of Hyphal Growth in Candida albicans

Molecular Biology of the Cell, 2008

Members of the dual-specificity tyrosine-phosphorylated and regulated kinase (DYRK) family perform a variety of functions in eukaryotes. We used gene disruption, targeted pharmacologic inhibition, and genome-wide transcriptional profiling to dissect the function of the Yak1 DYRK in the human fungal pathogen Candida albicans. C. albicans strains with mutant yak1 alleles showed defects in the yeast-to-hypha transition and in maintaining hyphal growth. They also could not form biofilms. Despite their in vitro filamentation defect, C. albicans yak1⌬/yak1⌬ mutants remained virulent in animal models of systemic and oropharyngeal candidiasis. Transcriptional profiling showed that Yak1 was necessary for the up-regulation of only a subset of hypha-induced genes. Although downstream targets of the Tec1 and Bcr1 transcription factors were down-regulated in the yak1⌬/yak1⌬ mutant, TEC1 and BCR1 were not. Furthermore, 63% of Yak1-dependent, hypha-specific genes have been reported to be negatively regulated by the transcriptional repressor Tup1 and inactivation of TUP1 in the yak1⌬/yak1⌬ mutant restored filamentation, suggesting that Yak1 may function upstream of Tup1 in governing hyphal emergence and maintenance. † Present address: Evolva SA, Hagmattstrasse 6, 4123 Allschwil, Switzerland.