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Anidulafungin Treatment Blocks the Sexual Cycle of Pneumocystis murina and Prevents Growth and Survival without Rescue by an Alternative Mode of Replication

The proposed life cycle of fungi in the genus Pneumocystis has typically included both an asexual cycle via binary fission and a sexual cycle. Until recently, the strategy used for sexual replication was largely unknown, but genomic and functional assays now support a mode known as primary homothall...

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Autores principales: Cushion, Melanie T., Ashbaugh, Alan, Sayson, Steven G., Mosley, Christopher, Hauser, Philippe M.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Society for Microbiology 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9769855/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36287071
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/spectrum.02906-22
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author Cushion, Melanie T.
Ashbaugh, Alan
Sayson, Steven G.
Mosley, Christopher
Hauser, Philippe M.
author_facet Cushion, Melanie T.
Ashbaugh, Alan
Sayson, Steven G.
Mosley, Christopher
Hauser, Philippe M.
author_sort Cushion, Melanie T.
collection PubMed
description The proposed life cycle of fungi in the genus Pneumocystis has typically included both an asexual cycle via binary fission and a sexual cycle. Until recently, the strategy used for sexual replication was largely unknown, but genomic and functional assays now support a mode known as primary homothallism (self-fertilization). The question of whether an asexual cycle contributes to the growth of these fungi remains. Treatment of Pneumocystis pneumonia in immunosuppressed rodent models with the class of drugs known as echinocandins is challenging the historical concept of asexual replication. The echinocandins target 1,3-β-D-glucan (BG) synthesis resulting in death for most fungi. Because Pneumocystis species have both non-BG expressing life cycle stages (trophic forms) and BG-expressing asci, treatment with anidulafungin and caspofungin resulted in elimination of asci, with large numbers of non-BG expressing organisms remaining in the lungs. Transcriptional analyses of anidulafungin treated Pneumocystis murina-infected lungs indicated that these agents were blocking the sexual cycle. In the present study, we explored whether there was an asexual or alternative method of replication that could rescue P. murina survival and growth in the context of anidulafungin treatment. The effects of anidulafungin treatment on early events in the sexual cycle were investigated by RT-qPCR targeting specific mating genes, including mam2, map3, matMi, matPi, and matMc. Results from the in vivo and gene expression studies clearly indicated there was no rescue by an asexual cycle, supporting these fungi’s reliance on the sexual cycle for survival and growth. Dysregulation of mating-associated genes showed that anidulafungin induced effects early in the mating process. IMPORTANCE The concept of a sexually obligate fungus is unique among human fungal pathogens. This reliance can be exploited for drug development and here we show a proof of principle for this unusual target. Most human fungal pathogens eschew the mammalian environment with its battery of immune responses. Pneumocystis appear to have evolved to survive in such an environment, perhaps by using sexual replication to help in DNA repair and to introduce genetic variation in its major surface antigen family because the lung is the primary environment of these pathogens. The concept of primary homothallism fits well into its chosen ecosystem, with ready mating partners expressing both mating type receptors, and a sexual cycle that can introduce beneficial genetic variation without the need for outbreeding.
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spelling pubmed-97698552022-12-22 Anidulafungin Treatment Blocks the Sexual Cycle of Pneumocystis murina and Prevents Growth and Survival without Rescue by an Alternative Mode of Replication Cushion, Melanie T. Ashbaugh, Alan Sayson, Steven G. Mosley, Christopher Hauser, Philippe M. Microbiol Spectr Research Article The proposed life cycle of fungi in the genus Pneumocystis has typically included both an asexual cycle via binary fission and a sexual cycle. Until recently, the strategy used for sexual replication was largely unknown, but genomic and functional assays now support a mode known as primary homothallism (self-fertilization). The question of whether an asexual cycle contributes to the growth of these fungi remains. Treatment of Pneumocystis pneumonia in immunosuppressed rodent models with the class of drugs known as echinocandins is challenging the historical concept of asexual replication. The echinocandins target 1,3-β-D-glucan (BG) synthesis resulting in death for most fungi. Because Pneumocystis species have both non-BG expressing life cycle stages (trophic forms) and BG-expressing asci, treatment with anidulafungin and caspofungin resulted in elimination of asci, with large numbers of non-BG expressing organisms remaining in the lungs. Transcriptional analyses of anidulafungin treated Pneumocystis murina-infected lungs indicated that these agents were blocking the sexual cycle. In the present study, we explored whether there was an asexual or alternative method of replication that could rescue P. murina survival and growth in the context of anidulafungin treatment. The effects of anidulafungin treatment on early events in the sexual cycle were investigated by RT-qPCR targeting specific mating genes, including mam2, map3, matMi, matPi, and matMc. Results from the in vivo and gene expression studies clearly indicated there was no rescue by an asexual cycle, supporting these fungi’s reliance on the sexual cycle for survival and growth. Dysregulation of mating-associated genes showed that anidulafungin induced effects early in the mating process. IMPORTANCE The concept of a sexually obligate fungus is unique among human fungal pathogens. This reliance can be exploited for drug development and here we show a proof of principle for this unusual target. Most human fungal pathogens eschew the mammalian environment with its battery of immune responses. Pneumocystis appear to have evolved to survive in such an environment, perhaps by using sexual replication to help in DNA repair and to introduce genetic variation in its major surface antigen family because the lung is the primary environment of these pathogens. The concept of primary homothallism fits well into its chosen ecosystem, with ready mating partners expressing both mating type receptors, and a sexual cycle that can introduce beneficial genetic variation without the need for outbreeding. American Society for Microbiology 2022-10-26 /pmc/articles/PMC9769855/ /pubmed/36287071 http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/spectrum.02906-22 Text en Copyright © 2022 Cushion et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) .
spellingShingle Research Article
Cushion, Melanie T.
Ashbaugh, Alan
Sayson, Steven G.
Mosley, Christopher
Hauser, Philippe M.
Anidulafungin Treatment Blocks the Sexual Cycle of Pneumocystis murina and Prevents Growth and Survival without Rescue by an Alternative Mode of Replication
title Anidulafungin Treatment Blocks the Sexual Cycle of Pneumocystis murina and Prevents Growth and Survival without Rescue by an Alternative Mode of Replication
title_full Anidulafungin Treatment Blocks the Sexual Cycle of Pneumocystis murina and Prevents Growth and Survival without Rescue by an Alternative Mode of Replication
title_fullStr Anidulafungin Treatment Blocks the Sexual Cycle of Pneumocystis murina and Prevents Growth and Survival without Rescue by an Alternative Mode of Replication
title_full_unstemmed Anidulafungin Treatment Blocks the Sexual Cycle of Pneumocystis murina and Prevents Growth and Survival without Rescue by an Alternative Mode of Replication
title_short Anidulafungin Treatment Blocks the Sexual Cycle of Pneumocystis murina and Prevents Growth and Survival without Rescue by an Alternative Mode of Replication
title_sort anidulafungin treatment blocks the sexual cycle of pneumocystis murina and prevents growth and survival without rescue by an alternative mode of replication
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9769855/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36287071
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/spectrum.02906-22
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