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Amplification of TLO Mediator Subunit Genes Facilitate Filamentous Growth in Candida Spp.

Filamentous growth is a hallmark of C. albicans pathogenicity compared to less-virulent ascomycetes. A multitude of transcription factors regulate filamentous growth in response to specific environmental cues. Our work, however, suggests the evolutionary history of C. albicans that resulted in its f...

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Autores principales: Liu, Zhongle, Moran, Gary P., Sullivan, Derek J., MacCallum, Donna M., Myers, Lawrence C.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5065183/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27741243
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1006373
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author Liu, Zhongle
Moran, Gary P.
Sullivan, Derek J.
MacCallum, Donna M.
Myers, Lawrence C.
author_facet Liu, Zhongle
Moran, Gary P.
Sullivan, Derek J.
MacCallum, Donna M.
Myers, Lawrence C.
author_sort Liu, Zhongle
collection PubMed
description Filamentous growth is a hallmark of C. albicans pathogenicity compared to less-virulent ascomycetes. A multitude of transcription factors regulate filamentous growth in response to specific environmental cues. Our work, however, suggests the evolutionary history of C. albicans that resulted in its filamentous growth plasticity may be tied to a change in the general transcription machinery rather than transcription factors and their specific targets. A key genomic difference between C. albicans and its less-virulent relatives, including its closest relative C. dubliniensis, is the unique expansion of the TLO (TeLOmere-associated) gene family in C. albicans. Individual Tlo proteins are fungal-specific subunits of Mediator, a large multi-subunit eukaryotic transcriptional co-activator complex. This amplification results in a large pool of ‘free,’ non-Mediator associated, Tlo protein present in C. albicans, but not in C. dubliniensis or other ascomycetes with attenuated virulence. We show that engineering a large ‘free’ pool of the C. dubliniensis Tlo2 (CdTlo2) protein in C. dubliniensis, through overexpression, results in a number of filamentation phenotypes typically associated only with C. albicans. The amplitude of these phenotypes is proportional to the amount of overexpressed CdTlo2 protein. Overexpression of other C. dubliniensis and C. albicans Tlo proteins do result in these phenotypes. Tlo proteins and their orthologs contain a Mediator interaction domain, and a potent transcriptional activation domain. Nuclear localization of the CdTlo2 activation domain, facilitated naturally by the Tlo Mediator binding domain or artificially through an appended nuclear localization signal, is sufficient for the CdTlo2 overexpression phenotypes. A C. albicans med3 null mutant causes multiple defects including the inability to localize Tlo proteins to the nucleus and reduced virulence in a murine systemic infection model. Our data supports a model in which the activation domain of ‘free’ Tlo protein competes with DNA bound transcription factors for targets that regulate key aspects of C. albicans cell physiology.
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spelling pubmed-50651832016-10-27 Amplification of TLO Mediator Subunit Genes Facilitate Filamentous Growth in Candida Spp. Liu, Zhongle Moran, Gary P. Sullivan, Derek J. MacCallum, Donna M. Myers, Lawrence C. PLoS Genet Research Article Filamentous growth is a hallmark of C. albicans pathogenicity compared to less-virulent ascomycetes. A multitude of transcription factors regulate filamentous growth in response to specific environmental cues. Our work, however, suggests the evolutionary history of C. albicans that resulted in its filamentous growth plasticity may be tied to a change in the general transcription machinery rather than transcription factors and their specific targets. A key genomic difference between C. albicans and its less-virulent relatives, including its closest relative C. dubliniensis, is the unique expansion of the TLO (TeLOmere-associated) gene family in C. albicans. Individual Tlo proteins are fungal-specific subunits of Mediator, a large multi-subunit eukaryotic transcriptional co-activator complex. This amplification results in a large pool of ‘free,’ non-Mediator associated, Tlo protein present in C. albicans, but not in C. dubliniensis or other ascomycetes with attenuated virulence. We show that engineering a large ‘free’ pool of the C. dubliniensis Tlo2 (CdTlo2) protein in C. dubliniensis, through overexpression, results in a number of filamentation phenotypes typically associated only with C. albicans. The amplitude of these phenotypes is proportional to the amount of overexpressed CdTlo2 protein. Overexpression of other C. dubliniensis and C. albicans Tlo proteins do result in these phenotypes. Tlo proteins and their orthologs contain a Mediator interaction domain, and a potent transcriptional activation domain. Nuclear localization of the CdTlo2 activation domain, facilitated naturally by the Tlo Mediator binding domain or artificially through an appended nuclear localization signal, is sufficient for the CdTlo2 overexpression phenotypes. A C. albicans med3 null mutant causes multiple defects including the inability to localize Tlo proteins to the nucleus and reduced virulence in a murine systemic infection model. Our data supports a model in which the activation domain of ‘free’ Tlo protein competes with DNA bound transcription factors for targets that regulate key aspects of C. albicans cell physiology. Public Library of Science 2016-10-14 /pmc/articles/PMC5065183/ /pubmed/27741243 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1006373 Text en © 2016 Liu 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 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Liu, Zhongle
Moran, Gary P.
Sullivan, Derek J.
MacCallum, Donna M.
Myers, Lawrence C.
Amplification of TLO Mediator Subunit Genes Facilitate Filamentous Growth in Candida Spp.
title Amplification of TLO Mediator Subunit Genes Facilitate Filamentous Growth in Candida Spp.
title_full Amplification of TLO Mediator Subunit Genes Facilitate Filamentous Growth in Candida Spp.
title_fullStr Amplification of TLO Mediator Subunit Genes Facilitate Filamentous Growth in Candida Spp.
title_full_unstemmed Amplification of TLO Mediator Subunit Genes Facilitate Filamentous Growth in Candida Spp.
title_short Amplification of TLO Mediator Subunit Genes Facilitate Filamentous Growth in Candida Spp.
title_sort amplification of tlo mediator subunit genes facilitate filamentous growth in candida spp.
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5065183/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27741243
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1006373
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