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Elevated catalase expression in a fungal pathogen is a double-edged sword of iron

Most fungal pathogens of humans display robust protective oxidative stress responses that contribute to their pathogenicity. The induction of enzymes that detoxify reactive oxygen species (ROS) is an essential component of these responses. We showed previously that ectopic expression of the heme-con...

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Autores principales: Pradhan, Arnab, Herrero-de-Dios, Carmen, Belmonte, Rodrigo, Budge, Susan, Lopez Garcia, Angela, Kolmogorova, Aljona, Lee, Keunsook K., Martin, Brennan D., Ribeiro, Antonio, Bebes, Attila, Yuecel, Raif, Gow, Neil A. R., Munro, Carol A., MacCallum, Donna M., Quinn, Janet, Brown, Alistair J. P.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5456399/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28542620
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1006405
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author Pradhan, Arnab
Herrero-de-Dios, Carmen
Belmonte, Rodrigo
Budge, Susan
Lopez Garcia, Angela
Kolmogorova, Aljona
Lee, Keunsook K.
Martin, Brennan D.
Ribeiro, Antonio
Bebes, Attila
Yuecel, Raif
Gow, Neil A. R.
Munro, Carol A.
MacCallum, Donna M.
Quinn, Janet
Brown, Alistair J. P.
author_facet Pradhan, Arnab
Herrero-de-Dios, Carmen
Belmonte, Rodrigo
Budge, Susan
Lopez Garcia, Angela
Kolmogorova, Aljona
Lee, Keunsook K.
Martin, Brennan D.
Ribeiro, Antonio
Bebes, Attila
Yuecel, Raif
Gow, Neil A. R.
Munro, Carol A.
MacCallum, Donna M.
Quinn, Janet
Brown, Alistair J. P.
author_sort Pradhan, Arnab
collection PubMed
description Most fungal pathogens of humans display robust protective oxidative stress responses that contribute to their pathogenicity. The induction of enzymes that detoxify reactive oxygen species (ROS) is an essential component of these responses. We showed previously that ectopic expression of the heme-containing catalase enzyme in Candida albicans enhances resistance to oxidative stress, combinatorial oxidative plus cationic stress, and phagocytic killing. Clearly ectopic catalase expression confers fitness advantages in the presence of stress, and therefore in this study we tested whether it enhances fitness in the absence of stress. We addressed this using a set of congenic barcoded C. albicans strains that include doxycycline-conditional tetON-CAT1 expressors. We show that high basal catalase levels, rather than CAT1 induction following stress imposition, reduce ROS accumulation and cell death, thereby promoting resistance to acute peroxide or combinatorial stress. This conclusion is reinforced by our analyses of phenotypically diverse clinical isolates and the impact of stochastic variation in catalase expression upon stress resistance in genetically homogeneous C. albicans populations. Accordingly, cat1Δ cells are more sensitive to neutrophil killing. However, we find that catalase inactivation does not attenuate C. albicans virulence in mouse or invertebrate models of systemic candidiasis. Furthermore, our direct comparisons of fitness in vitro using isogenic barcoded CAT1, cat1Δ and tetON-CAT1 strains show that, while ectopic catalase expression confers a fitness advantage during peroxide stress, it confers a fitness defect in the absence of stress. This fitness defect is suppressed by iron supplementation. Also high basal catalase levels induce key iron assimilatory functions (CFL5, FET3, FRP1, FTR1). We conclude that while high basal catalase levels enhance peroxide stress resistance, they place pressure on iron homeostasis through an elevated cellular demand for iron, thereby reducing the fitness of C. albicans in iron-limiting tissues within the host.
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spelling pubmed-54563992017-06-06 Elevated catalase expression in a fungal pathogen is a double-edged sword of iron Pradhan, Arnab Herrero-de-Dios, Carmen Belmonte, Rodrigo Budge, Susan Lopez Garcia, Angela Kolmogorova, Aljona Lee, Keunsook K. Martin, Brennan D. Ribeiro, Antonio Bebes, Attila Yuecel, Raif Gow, Neil A. R. Munro, Carol A. MacCallum, Donna M. Quinn, Janet Brown, Alistair J. P. PLoS Pathog Research Article Most fungal pathogens of humans display robust protective oxidative stress responses that contribute to their pathogenicity. The induction of enzymes that detoxify reactive oxygen species (ROS) is an essential component of these responses. We showed previously that ectopic expression of the heme-containing catalase enzyme in Candida albicans enhances resistance to oxidative stress, combinatorial oxidative plus cationic stress, and phagocytic killing. Clearly ectopic catalase expression confers fitness advantages in the presence of stress, and therefore in this study we tested whether it enhances fitness in the absence of stress. We addressed this using a set of congenic barcoded C. albicans strains that include doxycycline-conditional tetON-CAT1 expressors. We show that high basal catalase levels, rather than CAT1 induction following stress imposition, reduce ROS accumulation and cell death, thereby promoting resistance to acute peroxide or combinatorial stress. This conclusion is reinforced by our analyses of phenotypically diverse clinical isolates and the impact of stochastic variation in catalase expression upon stress resistance in genetically homogeneous C. albicans populations. Accordingly, cat1Δ cells are more sensitive to neutrophil killing. However, we find that catalase inactivation does not attenuate C. albicans virulence in mouse or invertebrate models of systemic candidiasis. Furthermore, our direct comparisons of fitness in vitro using isogenic barcoded CAT1, cat1Δ and tetON-CAT1 strains show that, while ectopic catalase expression confers a fitness advantage during peroxide stress, it confers a fitness defect in the absence of stress. This fitness defect is suppressed by iron supplementation. Also high basal catalase levels induce key iron assimilatory functions (CFL5, FET3, FRP1, FTR1). We conclude that while high basal catalase levels enhance peroxide stress resistance, they place pressure on iron homeostasis through an elevated cellular demand for iron, thereby reducing the fitness of C. albicans in iron-limiting tissues within the host. Public Library of Science 2017-05-22 /pmc/articles/PMC5456399/ /pubmed/28542620 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1006405 Text en © 2017 Pradhan 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
Pradhan, Arnab
Herrero-de-Dios, Carmen
Belmonte, Rodrigo
Budge, Susan
Lopez Garcia, Angela
Kolmogorova, Aljona
Lee, Keunsook K.
Martin, Brennan D.
Ribeiro, Antonio
Bebes, Attila
Yuecel, Raif
Gow, Neil A. R.
Munro, Carol A.
MacCallum, Donna M.
Quinn, Janet
Brown, Alistair J. P.
Elevated catalase expression in a fungal pathogen is a double-edged sword of iron
title Elevated catalase expression in a fungal pathogen is a double-edged sword of iron
title_full Elevated catalase expression in a fungal pathogen is a double-edged sword of iron
title_fullStr Elevated catalase expression in a fungal pathogen is a double-edged sword of iron
title_full_unstemmed Elevated catalase expression in a fungal pathogen is a double-edged sword of iron
title_short Elevated catalase expression in a fungal pathogen is a double-edged sword of iron
title_sort elevated catalase expression in a fungal pathogen is a double-edged sword of iron
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5456399/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28542620
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1006405
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