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Hypoxia and Temperature Regulated Morphogenesis in Candida albicans

Candida albicans is a common commensal in the human gut but in predisposed patients it can become an important human fungal pathogen. As a commensal, C. albicans adapts to low-oxygen conditions and represses its hyphal development by the transcription factor Efg1, which under normoxia activates fila...

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Autores principales: Desai, Prashant R., van Wijlick, Lasse, Kurtz, Dagmar, Juchimiuk, Mateusz, Ernst, Joachim F.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4537295/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26274602
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1005447
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author Desai, Prashant R.
van Wijlick, Lasse
Kurtz, Dagmar
Juchimiuk, Mateusz
Ernst, Joachim F.
author_facet Desai, Prashant R.
van Wijlick, Lasse
Kurtz, Dagmar
Juchimiuk, Mateusz
Ernst, Joachim F.
author_sort Desai, Prashant R.
collection PubMed
description Candida albicans is a common commensal in the human gut but in predisposed patients it can become an important human fungal pathogen. As a commensal, C. albicans adapts to low-oxygen conditions and represses its hyphal development by the transcription factor Efg1, which under normoxia activates filamentation. The repressive hypoxic but not the normoxic function of Efg1 required its unmodified N-terminus, was prevented by phosphomimetic residues at normoxic phosphorylation sites T179 and T206 and occurred only at temperatures ≤35°C. Genome-wide binding sites for native Efg1 identified 300 hypoxia-specific target genes, which overlapped partially with hypoxic binding sites for Ace2, a known positive regulator of hypoxic filamentation. Transcriptional analyses revealed that EFG1, ACE2 and their identified targets BCR1 and BRG1 encode an interconnected regulatory hub, in which Efg1/Bcr1 act as negative and Ace2/Brg1 act as positive regulators of gene expression under hypoxia. In this circuit, the hypoxic function of Ace2 was stimulated by elevated CO(2) levels. The hyperfilamentous phenotype of efg1 and bcr1 mutants depended on Ace2/Brg1 regulators and required increased expression of genes encoding Cek1 MAP kinase and its downstream target Cph1. The intricate temperature-dependent regulatory mechanisms under hypoxia suggest that C. albicans restricts hyphal morphogenesis in oxygen-poor body niches, possibly to persist as a commensal in the human host.
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spelling pubmed-45372952015-08-20 Hypoxia and Temperature Regulated Morphogenesis in Candida albicans Desai, Prashant R. van Wijlick, Lasse Kurtz, Dagmar Juchimiuk, Mateusz Ernst, Joachim F. PLoS Genet Research Article Candida albicans is a common commensal in the human gut but in predisposed patients it can become an important human fungal pathogen. As a commensal, C. albicans adapts to low-oxygen conditions and represses its hyphal development by the transcription factor Efg1, which under normoxia activates filamentation. The repressive hypoxic but not the normoxic function of Efg1 required its unmodified N-terminus, was prevented by phosphomimetic residues at normoxic phosphorylation sites T179 and T206 and occurred only at temperatures ≤35°C. Genome-wide binding sites for native Efg1 identified 300 hypoxia-specific target genes, which overlapped partially with hypoxic binding sites for Ace2, a known positive regulator of hypoxic filamentation. Transcriptional analyses revealed that EFG1, ACE2 and their identified targets BCR1 and BRG1 encode an interconnected regulatory hub, in which Efg1/Bcr1 act as negative and Ace2/Brg1 act as positive regulators of gene expression under hypoxia. In this circuit, the hypoxic function of Ace2 was stimulated by elevated CO(2) levels. The hyperfilamentous phenotype of efg1 and bcr1 mutants depended on Ace2/Brg1 regulators and required increased expression of genes encoding Cek1 MAP kinase and its downstream target Cph1. The intricate temperature-dependent regulatory mechanisms under hypoxia suggest that C. albicans restricts hyphal morphogenesis in oxygen-poor body niches, possibly to persist as a commensal in the human host. Public Library of Science 2015-08-14 /pmc/articles/PMC4537295/ /pubmed/26274602 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1005447 Text en © 2015 Desai et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Desai, Prashant R.
van Wijlick, Lasse
Kurtz, Dagmar
Juchimiuk, Mateusz
Ernst, Joachim F.
Hypoxia and Temperature Regulated Morphogenesis in Candida albicans
title Hypoxia and Temperature Regulated Morphogenesis in Candida albicans
title_full Hypoxia and Temperature Regulated Morphogenesis in Candida albicans
title_fullStr Hypoxia and Temperature Regulated Morphogenesis in Candida albicans
title_full_unstemmed Hypoxia and Temperature Regulated Morphogenesis in Candida albicans
title_short Hypoxia and Temperature Regulated Morphogenesis in Candida albicans
title_sort hypoxia and temperature regulated morphogenesis in candida albicans
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4537295/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26274602
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1005447
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