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Fungal microorganisms frequently lead to life-threatening infections. Within this group of pathogens, the commensal Candida albicans and the filamentous fungus Aspergillus fumigatus are by far the most important causes of invasive mycoses in Europe. A key capability for host invasion and immune response evasion are specific molecular interactions between the fungal pathogen and its human host. Experimentally validated knowledge about these crucial interactions is rare in literature and even specialized host pathogen databases mainly focus on bacterial and viral interactions whereas information on fungi is still sparse. To establish large-scale host fungi interaction networks on a systems biology scale, we develop an extended inference approach based on protein orthology and data on gene functions. Using human and yeast intraspecies networks as template, we derive a large network of pathogen host interactions (PHI). Rigorous filtering and refinement steps based on cellular localization and pathogenicity information of predicted interactors yield a primary scaffold of fungi human and fungi mouse interaction networks. Specific enrichment of known pathogenicity-relevant genes indicates the biological relevance of the predicted PHI. A detailed inspection of functionally relevant subnetworks reveals novel host fungal interaction candidates such as the Candida virulence factor PLB1 and the anti-fungal host protein APP. Our results demonstrate the applicability of interolog-based prediction methods for host fungi interactions and underline the importance of filtering and refinement steps to attain biologically more relevant interactions. This integrated network framework can serve as a basis for future analyses of high-throughput host fungi transcriptome and proteome data.
Azobenzene derivatives with activity against drug‐resistant Candida albicans and Candida auris
(2023)
Increasing resistance against antimycotic drugs challenges anti‐infective therapies today and contributes to the mortality of infections by drug‐resistant Candida species and strains. Therefore, novel antifungal agents are needed. A promising approach in developing new drugs is using naturally occurring molecules as lead structures. In this work, 4,4'‐dihydroxyazobenzene, a compound structurally related to antifungal stilbene derivatives and present in Agaricus xanthodermus (yellow stainer), served as a starting point for the synthesis of five azobenzene derivatives. These compounds prevented the growth of both fluconazole‐susceptible and fluconazole‐resistant Candida albicans and Candida auris strains. Further in vivo studies are required to confirm the potential therapeutic value of these compounds.
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.
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.
ABSTRACT
The highly conserved heterotrimeric protein kinase SNF1 is important for metabolic adaptations in the pathogenic yeast Candida albicans. A key function of SNF1 is to inactivate the repressor protein Mig1 and thereby allow the expression of genes that are required for the utilization of alternative carbon sources when the preferred carbon source, glucose, is absent or becomes limiting. However, how SNF1 controls Mig1 activity in C. albicans has remained elusive. Using a phosphoproteomics approach, we found that Mig1 is phosphorylated at multiple serine residues. Replacement of these serine residues by nonphosphorylatable alanine residues strongly increased the repressor activity of Mig1 in cells lacking a functional SNF1 complex, indicating that additional protein kinases are involved in the regulation of Mig1. Unlike wild-type Mig1, whose levels strongly decreased when the cells were grown on sucrose or glycerol instead of glucose, the levels of a mutant Mig1 protein lacking nine phosphorylation sites remained high under these conditions. Despite the increased protein levels and the absence of multiple phosphorylation sites, cells with a functional SNF1 complex could still sufficiently inhibit the hyperactive Mig1 to enable wild-type growth on alternative carbon sources. In line with this, phosphorylated forms of the mutant Mig1 were still detected in the presence and absence of a functional SNF1, demonstrating that Mig1 contains additional, unidentified phosphorylation sites and that downstream protein kinases are involved in the control of Mig1 activity by SNF1.
IMPORTANCE
The SNF1 protein kinase signaling pathway, which is highly conserved in eukaryotic cells, is important for metabolic adaptations in the pathogenic yeast Candida albicans. However, so far, it has remained elusive how SNF1 controls the activity of one of its main effectors, the repressor protein Mig1 that inhibits the expression of genes required for the utilization of alternative carbon sources when glucose is available. In this study, we have identified multiple phosphorylation sites in Mig1 that contribute to its inactivation. Mutation of these sites strongly increased Mig1 repressor activity in the absence of SNF1, but SNF1 could still sufficiently inhibit the hyperactive Mig1 to enable growth on alternative carbon sources. These findings reveal features of Mig1 that are important for controlling its repressor activity. Furthermore, they demonstrate that both SNF1 and additional protein kinases regulate Mig1 in this pathogenic yeast.
The clonal population structure of Candida albicans suggests that (para)sexual recombination does not play an important role in the lifestyle of this opportunistic fungal pathogen, an assumption that is strengthened by the fact that most C. albicans strains are heterozygous at the mating type locus (MTL) and therefore mating-incompetent. On the other hand, mating might occur within clonal populations and allow the combination of advantageous traits that were acquired by individual cells to adapt to adverse conditions. We have investigated if parasexual recombination may be involved in the evolution of highly drug-resistant strains exhibiting multiple resistance mechanisms against fluconazole, an antifungal drug that is commonly used to treat infections by C. albicans. Growth of strains that were heterozygous for MTL and different fluconazole resistance mutations in the presence of the drug resulted in the emergence of derivatives that had become homozygous for the mutated allele and the mating type locus and exhibited increased drug resistance. When MTLa/a and MTLα/α cells of these strains were mixed in all possible combinations, we could isolate mating products containing the genetic material from both parents. The initial mating products did not exhibit higher drug resistance than their parental strains, but further propagation under selective pressure resulted in the loss of the wild-type alleles and increased fluconazole resistance. Therefore, fluconazole treatment not only selects for resistance mutations but also promotes genomic alterations that confer mating competence, which allows cells in an originally clonal population to exchange individually acquired resistance mechanisms and generate highly drug-resistant progeny.
Evolution of antifungal drug resistance of the human-pathogenic fungus \(Candida\) \(albicans\)
(2021)
Infections with the opportunistic yeast Candida albicans are frequently treated with the first-line drug fluconazole, which inhibits ergosterol biosynthesis. An alarming problem in clinics is the development of resistances against this azole, especially during long-term treatment of patients. Well-known resistance mechanisms include mutations in the zinc cluster transcription factors (ZnTFs) Mrr1 and Tac1, which cause an overexpression of efflux pump genes, and Upc2, which results in an overexpression of the drug target. C. albicans strains with such gain-of-function mutations (GOF) have an increased drug resistance conferring a selective advantage in the presence of the drug. It was previously shown that this advantage comes with a fitness defect in the absence of the drug. This was observed in different conditions and is presumably caused by a deregulated gene expression.
One aim of the present study was to examine whether C. albicans can overcome the costs of drug resistance by further evolution. Therefore, the relative fitness of clinical isolates with one or a combination of different resistance mutations in Mrr1, Tac1 and/or Upc2 was analyzed in competition with the matched fluconazole-susceptible partner. Most fluconazole-resistant isolates had a decreased fitness in competition with their susceptible partner in vitro in rich medium. In contrast, three fluconazole-resistant strains with Mrr1 resistance mutations did not show a fitness defect in competition with their susceptible partner. In addition, the fitness of four selected clinical isolate pairs was examined in vivo in mouse models of gastrointestinal colonization (GI) and disseminated infection (IV). In the GI model all four fluconazole-resistant strains were outcompeted by their respective susceptible partner. In contrast, in the IV model only one out of four fluconazole-resistant isolates did show a slight fitness defect in competition with its susceptible partner during infection of the kidneys. It can be stated, that in the present work the in vitro fitness did not reflect the in vivo fitness and that the overall fitness was dependent on the tested conditions. In conclusion, C. albicans cannot easily overcome the costs of drug resistance caused by a deregulated gene expression.
In addition to GOFs in Mrr1, Tac1 and Upc2, resistance mutations in the drug target Erg11 are a further key fluconazole resistance mechanism of C. albicans. Clinical isolates often harbor several resistance mechanisms, as the fluconazole resistance level is further increased in strains with a combination of different resistance mutations. In this regard, the question arises of how strains with multiple resistance mechanisms evolve. One possibility is that strains acquire mutations successively. In the present study it was examined whether highly drug-resistant C. albicans strains with multiple resistance mechanisms can evolve by parasexual recombination as another possibility. In a clonal population, cells with individually acquired resistance mutations could combine these advantageous traits by mating. Thereupon selection could act on the mating progeny resulting in even better adapted derivatives.
Therefore, strains heterozygous for a resistance mutation and the mating type locus (MTL) were grown in the presence of fluconazole. Derivatives were isolated, which had become homozygous for the resistance mutation and at the same time for the MTL. This loss of heterozygosity was accompanied by increased drug resistance. In general, strains which are homozygous for one of both MTL configurations (MTLa and MTLα) can switch to the opaque phenotype, which is the mating-competent form of the yeast, and mate with cells of the opposite MTL. In the following, MTLa and MTLα homozygous strains in the opaque phenotype were mated in all possible combinations. The resulting mating products with combined genetic material from both parents did not show an increased drug resistance. Selected products of each mating cross were passaged with stepwise increasing concentrations of fluconazole. The isolated progeny showed high levels of drug resistance and loss of wild-type alleles of resistance-associated genes. In conclusion, selective pressure caused by fluconazole exposure selects for resistance mutations and at the same time induces genomic rearrangements, resulting in mating competence. Therefore, in a clonal population, cells with individually acquired resistance mutations can mate with each other and generate mating products with combined genetic backgrounds. Selection can act on these mating products and highly drug-resistant und thus highly adapted derivatives can evolve as a result.
In summary, the present study contributes to the current understanding of the evolution of antifungal drug resistance by elucidating the effect of resistance mutations on the fitness of the strains in the absence of the drug selection pressure and investigates how highly drug-resistant strains could evolve within a mammalian host.
Der Hefepilz Candida albicans kommt bei den meisten gesunden Menschen als harmloser Kommensale auf den Schleimhäuten des Verdauungs- und Urogenitaltraktes vor, kann aber insbesondere bei immunsupprimierten Patienten sowohl lokal beschränkte mukokutane als auch lebensbedrohliche systemische Infektionen verursachen. C. albicans zeichnet sich durch eine große morphologische Variabilität aus, die dazu beiträgt, dass der Pilz viele unterschiedliche Wirtsnischen erfolgreich besiedeln und infizieren kann. Neben dem durch Umweltsignale gesteuerten Wechsel zwischen Hefe- und Hyphenform kann C. albicans auch spontan und reversibel von der normalen Hefemorphologie (white) in eine sogenannte opaque-Zellform wechseln. Das white-opaque-Switching tritt nur bei Stämmen auf, die homozygot für den mating-type-Lokus (MTLa oder MTL) geworden sind, und ermöglicht das Mating von opaque-Zellen komplementären Paarungstyps. Da white- und opaque-Zellen unterschiedlich gut an bestimmte Wirtsnischen angepasst sind, scheint das white-opaque-Switching auch eine Bedeutung in der Pathogenität des Pilzes zu haben, und es ist von großem Interesse herauszufinden, wie dieser komplexe Prozess gesteuert wird. Die genetische Analyse von C. albicans ist durch das Fehlen einer haploiden Phase und durch eine Abweichung vom universalen Codon-Gebrauch in diesem Pilz erschwert. In den letzten Jahren wurden verschiedene Methoden zur gezielten Geninaktivierung und andere Werkzeuge für die funktionelle Genanalyse in C. albicans entwickelt. Die Möglichkeiten zur kontrollierten Genexpression sind jedoch noch begrenzt. In dieser Arbeit wurde deshalb ein System etabliert, das eine Tetrazyklin-induzierbare Expression von Genen in den verschiedenen morphologischen Formen von C. albicans und unabhängig von den Wachstumsbedingungen erlaubt. Zu diesem Zweck wurde eine Kassette konstruiert, die einen an C. albicans adaptierten, reversen Tetrazyklin-abhängigen Transaktivator (rtTA) enthält und in die Zielgene unter Kontrolle eines rtTA-abhängigen Promotors inseriert werden können. Nach Integration der Kassette ins C. albicans-Genom wird der Transaktivator konstitutiv exprimiert und ermöglicht die Induktion des Zielgens durch Zugabe von Doxyzyklin. Mit Hilfe des GFP-Reportergens wurde bestätigt, dass dieses Tet-On-System eine effiziente, Doxyzyklin-induzierbare Genexpression in Hefe-, Hyphen- und opaque-Zellen von C. albicans erlaubt. Die Tetrazyklin-induzierte Expression eines dominant-negativen CDC42-Allels blockierte in Hefezellen die Ausbildung von Knospen und resultierte in vergrößerten, mehrkernigen Zellen, während die Expression des NRG1-Repressors das filamentöse Wachstum unter allen getesteten Hypheninduktionsbedingungen effizient inhibierte. Eine Expression des MTLa1-Gens unter Kontrolle des Tet-abhängigen Promotors in opaque-Zellen eines MTL-Stammes führte zum Switching der Zellen in die white-Phase, was darauf hinwies, dass der nach dem Mating von a- und -opaque-Zellen gebildete a1/2-Repressorkomplex das Switching in die white-Phase bewirkt. Dagegen induzierte die Expression des MTLa2-Transkriptionsfaktors in -opaque-Zellen das Shmooing, das normalerweise durch das Pheromon des Matingpartners ausgelöst wird. Die Expression der site-spezifischen FLP-Rekombinase unter Kontrolle des Tet-abhängigen Promotors ermöglichte eine Tetrazyklin-induzierbare Deletion von essentiellen Genen und damit die Herstellung von konditional letalen Mutanten. In Kombination mit dem dominanten caSAT1-Selektionsmarker konnte das Tet-On-System auch in C. albicans-Wildtypstämmen eingesetzt werden und stellt daher eine vielseitig verwendbare Methode zur funktionellen Genanalyse und zur Manipulation des zellulären Verhaltens von C. albicans dar. In weiteren Experimenten wurde die Rolle des globalen Transkriptionsrepressors Tup1, der in heterozygoten MTLa/-C. albicans-Stämmen das filamentöse Wachstum inhibiert, und der phasenspezifischen Gene WH11 und OP4 beim white-opaque-Switching untersucht. Die Deletion des TUP1-Gens im MTL-Stamm WO-1 bewirkte, dass die Mutanten keine white- oder opaque-Zellen mehr bilden konnten. Stattdessen produzierten sie vier unterschiedliche Zell- und Koloniephänotypen, die ein verändertes Expressionsmuster von white- und opaque-spezifischen Genen zeigten und zwischen denen sie spontan und reversibel wechseln konnten. Interessanterweise waren drei der vier Varianten zum Mating mit MTLa-opaque-Zellen fähig und bildeten rekombinante Nachkommen. Diese Ergebnisse zeigten, dass Tup1 zwar auch in MTL-Zellen für die Aufrechterhaltung der normalen Zellmorphologie und Genexpression wichtig ist, jedoch nicht für das Switching an sich. Die Deletion des white-spezifischen Gens WH11 im Stamm WO-1 hatte keinen erkennbaren Effekt auf die Zell- und Koloniemorphologie von white- und opaque-Zellen, die phasenspezifische Genexpression oder die Frequenz des Switchings. Ein ähnliches Ergebnis wurde nach Inaktivierung des opaque-spezifischen OP4-Gens erhalten, und die Deletion von OP4-Gen hatte auch keinen Effekt auf das Mating der opaque-Zellen. Allerdings zeigten opaque-Zellen der op4-Mutanten ein im Vergleich zum Wildtyp verlangsamtes Wachstum bei niedrigen Temperaturen und bildeten spontan einen weiteren Koloniephänotyp aus. Die phasenspezifischen Gene WH11 und OP4 sind daher nicht notwendig für das white-opaque-Switching und haben vermutlich spezifischere Funktionen in der Ausprägung des phasenspezifischen Phänotyps.
Endothelzellen sind ein aktiver Bestandteil der angeborenen Immunabwehr des Menschen gegen mikrobielle Pathogene. Unter ungünstigen Bedingungen kann die Abwehrreaktion sogar zu einer lebensbedrohlichen Sepsis führen. Hier wurde die bislang wenig bekannte Endothelantwort auf den fakultativ humanpathogenen Hefepilz Candida albicans, einem der häufigsten Verursacher von letaler Sepsis beim Menschen, näher untersucht. Mittels Oligonukleotid-Mikroarray-Analyse von HUVEC nach Exposition mit C. albicans konnten 56 hochregulierte Gene identifiziert werden, während 69 Gene herunterreguliert wurden. Ein bedeutender Anteil der regulierten Gene ist an Prozessen der angeborenen Immunantwort beteiligt und dient hauptsächlich der Rekrutierung von Neutrophilen. Weitere Untersuchungen ergaben eine zentrale Rolle des proinflammatorischen NF-kappaB-Weges bei der Regulation des Candida-induzierten Transkriptoms von Endothelzellen. Es konnte gezeigt werden, dass C. albicans diesen Signalweg sequenziell aktiviert. Zusätzlich konnte durch die Expression einer dominant-negativen Mutante einer Signalkomponente des NF-kappaB-Signalwegs die Candida-vermittelte Induktion von kappaB-abhängigen Genen gehemmt werden. Mit einem pharmakologischen Ansatz wurde der p38 MAP Kinase-Signalweg als weiterer bedeutsamer Signalweg identifiziert, der die Expression einzelner Candida-Zielgene wie CXCL8/IL-8 moduliert. Schließlich wurde gezeigt, dass die Candida-induzierte NF-kappaB-Aktivierung im untersuchten endothelialen Zellsystem unabhängig von den Toll-like Rezeptoren TLR2 und TLR4 geschieht, die üblicherweise an der Erkennung mikrobieller Pathogene beteiligt sind. Durch RNA-Interferenz-Experimente konnte jedoch dargelegt werden, dass das Adaptermolekül MyD88 und die Kinase IRAK1, die beide entscheidend an der TLR-vermittelten Signaltransduktion beteiligt sind, essentiell für die Weiterleitung des Signals in Endothelzellen sind. Nachfolgend konnte mit TLR3 zumindest einer der signaltransduzierenden Rezeptoren identifiziert werden. Als erste umfassende Untersuchung der endothelialen Antwort auf Candida albicans erlaubt die vorliegende Arbeit neue Einblicke in die komplexen Signalmuster von Endothelzellen, die dieser klinisch bedeutende Krankheitserreger auslöst.
The protein kinase Snf1, a member of the highly conserved AMP-activated protein kinase family, is a central regulator of metabolic adaptation. In the pathogenic yeast Candida albicans, Snf1 is considered to be essential, as previous attempts by different research groups to generate homozygous snf1 Delta mutants were unsuccessful. We aimed to elucidate why Snf1 is required for viability in C. albicans by generating snf1 Delta null mutants through forced, inducible gene deletion and observing the terminal phenotype before cell death. Unexpectedly, we found that snf1 Delta mutants were viable and could grow, albeit very slowly, on rich media containing the preferred carbon source glucose. Growth was improved when the cells were incubated at 37 degrees C instead of 30 degrees C, and this phenotype enabled us to isolate homozygous snf1 Delta mutants also by conventional, sequential deletion of both SNF1 alleles in a wild-type C. albicans strain. All snf1 Delta mutants could grow slowly on glucose but were unable to utilize alternative carbon sources. Our results show that, under optimal conditions, C. albicans can live and grow without Snf1. Furthermore, they demonstrate that inducible gene deletion is a powerful method for assessing gene essentiality in C. albicans.
IMPORTANCE
Essential genes are those that are indispensable for the viability and growth of an organism. Previous studies indicated that the protein kinase Snf1, a central regulator of metabolic adaptation, is essential in the pathogenic yeast Candida albicans, because no homozygous snf1 deletion mutants of C. albicans wild-type strains could be obtained by standard approaches. In order to investigate the lethal consequences of SNF1 deletion, we generated conditional mutants in which SNF1 could be deleted by forced, inducible excision from the genome. Unexpectedly, we found that snf1 null mutants were viable and could grow slowly under optimal conditions. The growth phenotypes of the snf1 Delta mutants explain why such mutants were not recovered in previous attempts. Our study demonstrates that inducible gene deletion is a powerful method for assessing gene essentiality in C. albicans.