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Oligopeptides incorporating \(N3\)-(4-methoxyfumaroyl)-L-2,3-diaminopropanoic acid (FMDP), an inhibitor of glucosamine-6-phosphate synthase, exhibited growth inhibitory activity against \(Candida\) \(albicans\), with minimal inhibitory concentration values in the 0.05–50 μg mL\(^{-1}\) range. Uptake by the peptide permeases was found to be the main factor limiting an anticandidal activity of these compounds. Di- and tripeptide containing FMDP (F2 and F3) were transported by Ptr2p/Ptr22p peptide transporters (PTR) and FMDP-containing hexa-, hepta-, and undecapeptide (F6, F7, and F11) were taken up by the oligopeptide transporters (OPT) oligopeptide permeases, preferably by Opt2p/Opt3p. A phenotypic, apparent resistance of \(C. albicans\) to FMDP-oligopeptides transported by OPT permeases was triggered by the environmental factors, whereas resistance to those taken up by the PTR system had a genetic basis. Anticandidal activity of longer FMDP-oligopeptides was strongly diminished in minimal media containing easily assimilated ammonium sulfate or L-glutamine as the nitrogen source, both known to downregulate expression of the OPT genes. All FMDP-oligopeptides tested were more active at lower pH and this effect was slightly more remarkable for peptides F6, F7, and F11, compared to F2 and F3. Formation of isolated colonies was observed inside the growth inhibitory zones induced by F2 and F3 but not inside those induced by F6, F7, and F11. The vast majority (98%) of those colonies did not originate from truly resistant cells. The true resistance of 2% of isolates was due to the impaired transport of di- and to a lower extent, tripeptides. The resistant cells did not exhibit a lower expression of \(PTR2\), \(PTR22\), or \(OPT1–3\) genes, but mutations in the \(PTR2\) gene resulting in T422H, A320S, D119V, and A320S substitutions in the amino acid sequence of Ptr2p were found.
The fungal cell wall is essential for the maintenance of cellular integrity and mediates interactions of the cells with the environment. It is a highly flexible organelle whose composition and organization is modulated in response to changing growth conditions. In the pathogenic yeast Candida albicans, a network of signaling pathways regulates the structure of the cell wall, and mutants with defects in these pathways are hypersensitive to cell wall stress. By harnessing a library of genetically activated forms of all C. albicans zinc cluster transcription factors, we found that a hyperactive Czf1 rescued the hypersensitivity to cell wall stress of different protein kinase deletion mutants. The hyperactive Czf1 induced the expression of many genes with cell wall-related functions and caused visible changes in the cell wall structure. C. albicans czf1Δ mutants were hypersensitive to the antifungal drug caspofungin, which inhibits cell wall biosynthesis. The changes in cell wall architecture caused by hyperactivity or absence of Czf1 resulted in an increased recognition of C. albicans by human neutrophils. Our results show that Czf1, which is known as a regulator of filamentous growth and white-opaque switching, controls the expression of cell wall genes and modulates the architecture of the cell wall.
Abstract
Protein kinases are central components of almost all signaling pathways that control cellular activities. In the model organism Saccharomyces cerevisiae, the paralogous protein kinases Ypk1 and Ypk2, which control membrane lipid homeostasis, are essential for viability, and previous studies strongly indicated that this is also the case for their single ortholog Ypk1 in the pathogenic yeast Candida albicans. Here, using FLP-mediated inducible gene deletion, we reveal that C. albicans ypk1Δ mutants are viable but slow-growing, explaining prior failures to obtain null mutants. Phenotypic analyses of the mutants showed that the functions of Ypk1 in regulating sphingolipid biosynthesis and cell membrane lipid asymmetry are conserved, but the consequences of YPK1 deletion are milder than in S. cerevisiae. Mutational studies demonstrated that the highly conserved PDK1 phosphorylation site T548 in its activation loop is essential for Ypk1 function, whereas the TORC2 phosphorylation sites S687 and T705 at the C-terminus are important for Ypk1-dependent resistance to membrane stress. Unexpectedly, Pkh1, the single C. albicans orthologue of Pkh1/Pkh2, which mediate Ypk1 phosphorylation at the PDK1 site in S. cerevisiae, was not required for normal growth of C. albicans under nonstressed conditions, and Ypk1 phosphorylation at T548 was only slightly reduced in pkh1Δ mutants. We found that another protein kinase, Pkh3, whose ortholog in S. cerevisiae cannot substitute Pkh1/2, acts redundantly with Pkh1 to activate Ypk1 in C. albicans. No phenotypic effects were observed in cells lacking Pkh3 alone, but pkh1Δ pkh3Δ double mutants had a severe growth defect and Ypk1 phosphorylation at T548 was completely abolished. These results establish that Ypk1 is not essential for viability in C. albicans and that, despite its generally conserved function, the Ypk1 signaling pathway is rewired in this pathogenic yeast and includes a novel upstream kinase to activate Ypk1 by phosphorylation at the PDK1 site.
Author summary
Protein kinases are key components of cellular signaling pathways, and elucidating the specific roles of individual kinases is important to understand how organisms adapt to changes in their environment. The protein kinase Ypk1 is highly conserved in eukaryotic organisms and crucial for the maintenance of cell membrane homeostasis. It was previously thought that Ypk1 is essential for viability in the pathogenic yeast Candida albicans, as in the model organism Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Here, by using forced, inducible gene deletion, we reveal that C. albicans mutants lacking Ypk1 are viable but have a strong growth defect. The phenotypes of the mutants indicate that the known functions of Ypk1 are conserved in C. albicans, but loss of this kinase has less severe consequences than in S. cerevisiae. We also unravel the puzzling previous observation that C. albicans mutants lacking the Ypk1-activating kinase Pkh1, which is essential in S. cerevisiae, have no obvious growth defects. We show that the protein kinase Pkh3, which has not previously been implicated in the Ypk1 signaling pathway, can substitute Pkh1 and activate Ypk1 in C. albicans. These findings provide novel insights into this conserved signaling pathway and how it is rewired in a human-pathogenic fungus.
The yeast form of the fungus Candida albicans promotes persistence in the gut of gnotobiotic mice
(2017)
Many microorganisms that cause systemic, life-threatening infections in humans reside as harmless commensals in our digestive tract. Yet little is known about the biology of these microbes in the gut. Here, we visualize the interface between the human commensal and pathogenic fungus Candida albicans and the intestine of mice, a surrogate host. Because the indigenous mouse microbiota restricts C. albicans settlement, we compared the patterns of colonization in the gut of germ free and antibiotic-treated conventionally raised mice. In contrast to the heterogeneous morphologies found in the latter, we establish that in germ free animals the fungus almost uniformly adopts the yeast cell form, a proxy of its commensal state. By screening a collection of C. albicans transcription regulator deletion mutants in gnotobiotic mice, we identify several genes previously unknown to contribute to in vivo fitness. We investigate three of these regulators—ZCF8, ZFU2 and TRY4—and show that indeed they favor the yeast form over other morphologies. Consistent with this finding, we demonstrate that genetically inducing non-yeast cell morphologies is detrimental to the fitness of C. albicans in the gut. Furthermore, the identified regulators promote adherence of the fungus to a surface covered with mucin and to mucus-producing intestinal epithelial cells. In agreement with this result, histology sections indicate that C. albicans dwells in the murine gut in close proximity to the mucus layer. Thus, our findings reveal a set of regulators that endows C. albicans with the ability to endure in the intestine through multiple mechanisms.
The pathogenic yeast Candida albicans can develop resistance to the widely used antifungal agent fluconazole, which inhibits ergosterol biosynthesis, by the overexpression of genes encoding multidrug efflux pumps or ergosterol biosynthesis enzymes. Zinc cluster transcription factors play a central role in the transcriptional regulation of drug resistance. Mrr1 regulates the expression of the major facilitator MDR1, Tac1 controls the expression of the ABC transporters CDR1 and CDR2, and Upc2 regulates ergosterol biosynthesis (ERG) genes. Gain-of-function mutations in these transcription factors result in constitutive overexpression of their target genes and are responsible for fluconazole resistance in many clinical C. albicans isolates. The transcription factor Ndt80 contributes to the drug-induced upregulation of CDR1 and ERG genes and also binds to the MDR1 and CDR2 promoters, suggesting that it is an important component of all major transcriptional mechanisms of fluconazole resistance. However, we found that Ndt80 is not required for the induction of MDR1 and CDR2 expression by inducing chemicals. CDR2 was even partially derepressed in ndt80D mutants, indicating that Ndt80 is a repressor of CDR2 expression. Hyperactive forms of Mrr1, Tac1, and Upc2 promoted overexpression of MDR1, CDR1/CDR2, and ERG11, respectively, with the same efficiency in the presence and absence of Ndt80. Mrr1- and Tac1-mediated fluconazole resistance was even slightly enhanced in ndt80D mutants compared to wild-type cells. These results demonstrate that Ndt80 is dispensable for the constitutive overexpression of Mrr1, Tac1, and Upc2 target genes and the increased fluconazole resistance of strains that have acquired activating mutations in these transcription factors.
Microorganisms that colonize the human body face large fluctuations in their surroundings. Therefore, those microbes developed sophisticated mechanisms that allow them to adapt their cell biology and maintain cellular homeostasis. One organelle vital to preserve cell physiology is the vacuole. The vacuole exhibits a wide range of functions and is able to adjust itself in response to both external and internal stimuli. Moreover, it plays an important role in host interaction and virulence in fungi such as Candida albicans. Despite this connection, only a few regulatory proteins have been described to modulate vacuolar biology in fungal pathogens. Furthermore, whether such regulation alters fungus-host interplay remains largely unknown.
This thesis focuses on the characterization of ZCF8, a fungus-specific transcription regulator in the human-associated yeast C. albicans. To this end, I combined genome-wide protein-DNA interaction assays and gene expression analysis that identified genes regulated by Zcf8p. Fluorescence microscopy uncovered that several top targets of Zcf8p localize to the fungal vacuole. Moreover, deletion and overexpression of ZCF8 resulted in alterations in vacuolar morphology and in luminal pH and rendered the fungus resistant or susceptible to a vacuole-disturbing drug. Finally, in vitro adherence assays showed that Zcf8p modulates the attachment of C. albicans to human epithelial cells in a vacuole-dependent manner.
Given those findings, I posit that the previously uncharacterized transcription regulator Zcf8p modulates fungal attachment to epithelial cells in a manner that depends on the status of the fungal vacuole. Furthermore, the results highlight that vacuolar physiology is a substantial factor influencing the physical interaction between Candida cells and mammalian mucosal surfaces.
Protein kinases play central roles in virtually all signaling pathways that enable organisms to adapt to their environment. Microbial pathogens must cope with severely restricted iron availability in mammalian hosts to invade and establish themselves within infected tissues. To uncover protein kinase signaling pathways that are involved in the adaptation of the pathogenic yeast Candida albicans to iron limitation, we generated a comprehensive protein kinase deletion mutant library of a wild-type strain. Screening of this library revealed that the protein kinase Ire1, which has a conserved role in the response of eukaryotic cells to endoplasmic reticulum stress, is essential for growth of C. albicans under iron-limiting conditions. Ire1 was not necessary for the activity of the transcription factor Sef1, which regulates the response of the fungus to iron limitation, and Sef1 target genes that are induced by iron depletion were normally upregulated in ire1Δ mutants. Instead, Ire1 was required for proper localization of the high-affinity iron permease Ftr1 to the cell membrane. Intriguingly, iron limitation did not cause increased endoplasmic reticulum stress, and the transcription factor Hac1, which is activated by Ire1-mediated removal of the non-canonical intron in the HAC1 mRNA, was dispensable for Ftr1 localization to the cell membrane and growth under iron-limiting conditions. Nevertheless, expression of a pre-spliced HAC1 copy in ire1Δ mutants restored Ftr1 localization and rescued the growth defects of the mutants. Both ire1Δ and hac1Δ mutants were avirulent in a mouse model of systemic candidiasis, indicating that an appropriate response to endoplasmic reticulum stress is important for the virulence of C. albicans. However, the specific requirement of Ire1 for the functionality of the high-affinity iron permease Ftr1, a well-established virulence factor, even in the absence of endoplasmic reticulum stress uncovers a novel Hac1-independent essential role of Ire1 in iron acquisition and virulence of C. albicans.
Farnesol, produced by the polymorphic fungus Candida albicans, is the first quorum-sensing molecule discovered in eukaryotes. Its main function is control of C. albicans filamentation, a process closely linked to pathogenesis. In this study, we analyzed the effects of farnesol on innate immune cells known to be important for fungal clearance and protective immunity. Farnesol enhanced the expression of activation markers on monocytes (CD86 and HLA-DR) and neutrophils (CD66b and CD11b) and promoted oxidative burst and the release of proinflammatory cytokines (tumor necrosis factor alpha [TNF-\(\alpha\)] and macrophage inflammatory protein 1 alpha [MIP-1 \(\alpha\)]). However, this activation did not result in enhanced fungal uptake or killing. Furthermore, the differentiation of monocytes to immature dendritic cells (iDC) was significantly affected by farnesol. Several markers important for maturation and antigen presentation like CD1a, CD83, CD86, and CD80 were significantly reduced in the presence of farnesol. Furthermore, farnesol modulated migrational behavior and cytokine release and impaired the ability of DC to induce T cell proliferation. Of major importance was the absence of interleukin 12 (IL-12) induction in iDC generated in the presence of farnesol. Transcriptome analyses revealed a farnesol-induced shift in effector molecule expression and a down-regulation of the granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) receptor during monocytes to iDC differentiation. Taken together, our data unveil the ability of farnesol to act as a virulence factor of C. albicans by influencing innate immune cells to promote inflammation and mitigating the Th1 response, which is essential for fungal clearance.
In den letzten Jahren haben Pilzinfektionen zugenommen und bakterielle Infektionen nahezu überholt, wofür vor allem der massive Einsatz von Medikamenten sowie operative Eingriffe verantwortlich sind. Einer der gefährlichsten Auslöser schwerer Pilzinfektionen, die innere Organe schädigen und sehr schwer zu behandeln sind, ohne dabei den Wirtsorganismus zu schädigen, ist der opportunistische Hefepilz Candida albicans. Da aufgrund der immer größer werdenden Zahl von Resistenzen von Candida albicans nur ein relativ kleines Repertoire für die Therapie zur Verfügung steht, war das Ziel der vorliegenden Arbeit die Synthese einer Reihe peptidischer Inhibitoren mit elektrophilen Bausteinen als potentielle irreversible Inhibitoren der sekretorischen Aspartat-Proteasen (SAPs) des Hefepilzes Candida albicans und deren Testung an dem am stärksten exprimierten SAP-Isoenzym SAP2 sowie anderen Proteasen. Dabei sollte geklärt werden, ob neben der HIV-1-Protease auch andere Aspartat-Proteasen durch cis-konfigurierte Epoxide irreversibel hemmbar sind, ob andere elektrophile Ringe sowie elektronenarme Michael-Systeme in der Lage sind, als irreversible Aspartat-Protease-Inhibitoren zu fungieren, und ob die Z-Konfiguration der Olefine für die Hemmung von Aspartat-Proteasen ebenso wichtig ist wie die cis-Konfiguration bei Epoxiden. Die Aziridin-2-carboxylat-Bausteine wurden als Racemate über Cromwell-Synthese gewonnen und die Aziridin-2,3-dicarboxylat-Bausteine stereoselektiv aus Tartraten dargestellt. Die Oxiran-2-carboxylat-Bausteine wurden enantioselektiv ausgehend von Threonin bzw. als Racemate über Darzens-Glycidester-Synthese dargestellt. Die Synthese der Oxiran-2,3-dicarboxylat-Bausteine gelang mittels tertButylhydroperoxid / BuLi aus den Maleaten. Die Z-Olefinbausteine wurden durch Kupplung von Alkoholen bzw. AS an Maleinsäureanhydrid erhalten oder über Wittig- bzw. Horner-Wadsworth-Emmons-Reaktion dargestellt. Die Kupplung von AS bzw. Peptiden an die elektrophilen Bausteine erfolgte mit gängigen AS- / Peptidkupplungsmethoden. Die als irreversible Inhibitoren der SAP2 konzipierten Verbindungen wurden in einem neu entwickelten fluorimetrischen FRET-Assay auf ihre SAP2-Hemmung getestet. Dazu wurde ein Verdünnungsassay nach Kitz und Wilson durchgeführt und die zunehmende Fluoreszenz durch das Spaltprodukt der enzymatischen Hydrolyse des Substrats bei 540 nm detektiert (Anregung 355 nm). Als Substrat diente das Undecapeptid Dabcyl-Arg-Lys-Pro-Ala-Leu-Phe / Phe-Arg-Leu-Glu(EDANS)-ArgOH (/ markiert die Spaltstelle). Von den Inhibitoren wurden IC50-, k2nd- und, falls möglich, ki- und Ki-Werte ermittelt. Von den 41 an der SAP2 getesteten AS- / Peptid-verknüpften Verbindungen stellen die beiden Aziridine A-07 und A-08 mit k2nd-Werten im mittleren fünfstelligen Bereich [M-1min-1] die besten Inhibitoren dar. Bis auf zwei Verbindungen zeigen alle aktiven Verbindungen an der SAP2 sinkende IC50-Werte bei längerer Inkubationszeit und somit eine zeitabhängige und irreversible Hemmung. Zur Untersuchung der Selektivität wurden die Verbindungen mittels kontinuierlicher Assays an den Cystein-Proteasen Cathepsin B (human), Cathepsin L (Paramecium tetraurelia) und Rhodesain (Trypanosoma brucei rhodesiense) getestet. Als Substrat wurde dabei Cbz-Phe-Arg-AMC verwendet. Erfreulicherweise waren bis auf das E-konfigurierte Olefin E-Ol-04 alle Verbindungen an den Cystein-Proteasen inaktiv. Die Ergebnisse zeigen, dass neben den HIV-Proteasen auch die sekretorische Aspartat-Protease SAP2 durch cis-konfigurierte Epoxide irreversibel hemmbar ist. Desweiteren zeigt sich, dass mit Aziridinen auch andere elektrophile Ringe als irreversible Aspartat-Protease-Inhibitoren fungieren können. An der SAP2 zeigen sich die Aziridine sogar aktiver. Auch elektronenarme Michael-Systeme sind in der Lage Aspartat-Proteasen zu hemmen, auch wenn ihre Hemmung deutlich schwächer ist als die der Aziridine. Die Ergebnisse zeigen jedoch, dass nicht, wie angenommen, die Z-Konfiguration der Olefine entscheidend ist, sondern dass E-Olefine sogar bessere Hemmungen aufweisen. In Kooperation mit der Arbeitsgruppe von Prof. Dr. Joachim Morschhäuser und Dr. Peter Staib vom Institut für Molekulare Infektionsbiologie der Universität Würzburg, konnte gezeigt werden, dass die Aziridine A-07 und A-08 neben dem isolierten Enzym auch die SAP2-Produktion in Candida albicans-Zellkulturen hemmen ohne auf die Pilzzellen toxisch zu wirken. Neben der Hemmung der SAP2 wirken die Aziridine A-07 und A-08 auch antiplasmodial. Bei Testungen am Malaria-Erreger Plasmodium falciparum zeigten beide Aziridine einen IC50-Wert im unteren mikromolaren Bereich. Der Grund der Hemmung des Parasiten ist jedoch noch unklar, da A-07 und A-08 weder an den isolierten Cystein-Proteasen des Malaria-Erregers Falcipain 2 und 3 aktiv sind, noch dessen Aspartat-Protease Plasmepsin II hemmen.
Candida albicans gehört zu den für den Menschen fakultativ pathogenen Hefepilzen. Der normalerweise harmlose Begleiter der humanen Mikroflora findet sich hauptsächlich auf Schleimhäuten der Mundhöhle und des Magen-Darm-Trakt sowie in der vaginalen Flora. Menschen, deren Immunsystem geschwächt ist, sind jedoch besonders anfällig für Infektionen, die durch den Pilz hervorgerufen werden können. Neben oberflächlichen kann es dabei auch zu lebensbedrohlichen systemischen Infektionen kommen, die nicht selten zum Tod des Patienten führen. Durch ein zunehmendes Auftreten von Resistenzen gegen gebräuchliche Pharmaka besteht aktuell ein dringender Bedarf an neuen Wirkstoffen gegen Candida. Die zehn vom Hefepilz exprimierten sekretorischen Aspartatproteasen (SAP1-10), die als wichtige Virulenzfaktoren gelten, stellten sich dabei zunehmend als vielversprechende Targets heraus. Das Ziel dieser Arbeit war die Weiterentwicklung der literaturbekannten cis-konfigurierten 3-Phenylaziridin-2-carboxylate A-07 und A-08 als irreversible Inhibitoren der SAP-Isoenzyme. Die Variation der Substituenten am Aziridinstickstoff für die Adressierung der S3-Tasche im Enzym erfolgte durch Alkyl-, Aryl- und Acylreste. Die Aminosäureester wurden in Konfiguration und Art der Seitenkette modifiziert, um eine Verbesserung der Anpassung an die S1‘-Tasche zu ermöglichen. Die cis-3-Phenylaziridin-2-carboxylate wurden durch Cromwell-Synthese als Racemate erhalten. Aminosäure- und Peptidkupplungen erfolgten mit gängigen Kupplungsreagenzien (PPA, DPPA). Die stereoselektive Synthese des methylenverbrückten Aziridin-2-carboxylats A-10 erfolgte durch Redoxkondensation nach Mukaiyama. Die synthetisierten Verbindungen wurden in einem fluorimetrischen FRET-Assay auf ihre inhibitorische Wirkung gegen SAP2 getestet. Dabei war das im FRET-Assay bislang an SAP2 verwendete Substrat Dabcyl-Arg-Lys-Pro-Ala-Leu-Phe-Phe-Arg-Leu-Glu(EDANS)-ArgOH auch für Testungen an SAP1, 3 & 8 sowie Cathepsin D geeignet. Neben den jeweiligen Km-Werten konnten für diese Enzyme auch die zugehörigen kcat-Werte bestimmt werden. Zur Bestimmung der Hemmkonstanten wurde für die aktiven Verbindungen ein Verdünnungsassay nach Kitz und Wilson durchgeführt. 20 der 46 Aziridin-2-carboxylate erreichten SAP2 k2nd-Werte von mindestens 7880 M-1min-1. Die mit k2nd-Werten von 60608 bis 118582 M-1min-1 potentesten Verbindungen wurden durch (R)-Aminosäuresubstitution (A-28, A-31) bzw. durch Cyclohexylmethyl-Verknüpfung am Aziridinstickstoff (A-43, A-45) erhalten. Für die einzelnen Diastereomere von A-31, A-31a und A-31b, wurde eine signifikant unterschiedliche Hemmwirkung festgestellt. Die Inhibitoren zeigten eine zeitabhängige Hemmung, die nach ca. 30 min Inkubationszeit jedoch wieder schwächer wurde. LC-MS- und NMR-Studien lassen einen pseudo-irreversiblen Hemmmechanismus vermuten: Der Inhibitor bindet zunächst irreversibel unter Ringöffnung des Aziridins an das Enzym. Der entstehende Ester wird danach unter den sauren Assaybedingungen wieder hydrolysiert. Der resultierende Aminoalkohol bindet anschließend als Übergangszustandsanalogon reversibel an das Enzym. Selektivitätsstudien an Cathepsin D zeigten für 36 der 46 Aziridin-2-carboxylate k2nd-Werte von 10350 bis 936544 M-1min-1. Damit sind die Verbindungen an CathD aktiver als an SAP2. Die 1-Cyclohexylmethyl-verknüpften Aziridine wiesen auch an CathD die höchsten k2nd-Werte auf, wenngleich sich dabei die (R)-Konfiguration der Aminosäurereste (A-57, A-59) als die aktivere Variante herausstellte. Mit dem (R)-Phe-substituierten 1-tert-Butylaziridin A-58 erreichte der potenteste Vertreter der Reihe bereits einen Ki-Wert im dreistelligen nano-molaren Bereich. Ebenso wurden für die (R)-Aminosäure-Analoga von A-07 und A-08 (A-28, A-31) erhöhte Hemmkonstanten erhalten. Wie SAP2 wird auch CathD durch die (an)getrennten Diastereomere A-31a und A-31b signifikant unterschiedlich stark inhibiert. Mit den (R)-Valin-verknüpften Aziridinen A-81, A-82 und A-85 fanden sich aktive verzweigt-Alkyl-substituierte CathD-Inhibitoren.