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1.
EMBO J ; 38(19): e101597, 2019 10 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31448850

RESUMO

Understanding how cellular activities impact genome stability is critical to multiple biological processes including tumorigenesis and reproductive biology. The fungal pathogen Candida albicans displays striking genome dynamics during its parasexual cycle as tetraploid cells, but not diploid cells, exhibit genome instability and reduce their ploidy when grown on a glucose-rich "pre-sporulation" medium. Here, we reveal that C. albicans tetraploid cells are metabolically hyperactive on this medium with higher rates of fermentation and oxidative respiration relative to diploid cells. This heightened metabolism results in elevated levels of reactive oxygen species (ROS), activation of the ROS-responsive transcription factor Cap1, and the formation of DNA double-strand breaks. Genetic or chemical suppression of ROS levels suppresses each of these phenotypes and also protects against genome instability. These studies reveal how endogenous metabolic processes can generate sufficient ROS to trigger genome instability in polyploid C. albicans cells. We also discuss potential parallels with metabolism-induced instability in cancer cells and speculate that ROS-induced DNA damage could have facilitated ploidy cycling prior to a conventional meiosis in eukaryotes.


Assuntos
Fatores de Transcrição de Zíper de Leucina Básica/genética , Candida albicans/fisiologia , Proteínas de Ciclo Celular/genética , Dano ao DNA , Proteínas Fúngicas/genética , Instabilidade Genômica , Fermentação , Perfilação da Expressão Gênica , Regulação Fúngica da Expressão Gênica , Genoma Fúngico , Metabolômica , Estresse Oxidativo , Poliploidia , Espécies Reativas de Oxigênio/metabolismo , Regulação para Cima
2.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 114(52): 13780-13785, 2017 12 26.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29255038

RESUMO

Several pathogenic Candida species are capable of heritable and reversible switching between two epigenetic states, "white" and "opaque." In Candida albicans, white cells are essentially sterile, whereas opaque cells are mating-proficient. Here, we interrogate the mechanism by which the white-opaque switch regulates sexual fecundity and identify four genes in the pheromone MAPK pathway that are expressed at significantly higher levels in opaque cells than in white cells. These genes encode the ß subunit of the G-protein complex (STE4), the pheromone MAPK scaffold (CST5), and the two terminal MAP kinases (CEK1/CEK2). To define the contribution of each factor to mating, C. albicans white cells were reverse-engineered to express elevated, opaque-like levels of these factors, either singly or in combination. We show that white cells co-overexpressing STE4, CST5, and CEK2 undergo mating four orders of magnitude more efficiently than control white cells and at a frequency approaching that of opaque cells. Moreover, engineered white cells recapitulate the transcriptional and morphological responses of opaque cells to pheromone. These results therefore reveal multiple bottlenecks in pheromone MAPK signaling in white cells and that alleviation of these bottlenecks enables efficient mating by these "sterile" cell types. Taken together, our findings establish that differential expression of several MAPK factors underlies the epigenetic control of mating in C. albicans We also discuss how fitness advantages could have driven the evolution of a toggle switch to regulate sexual reproduction in pathogenic Candida species.


Assuntos
Candida albicans/metabolismo , Epigênese Genética/fisiologia , Regulação Fúngica da Expressão Gênica/fisiologia , Sistema de Sinalização das MAP Quinases/fisiologia , Feromônios/metabolismo , Candida albicans/genética , Feromônios/genética
3.
G3 (Bethesda) ; 11(7)2021 07 14.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33836061

RESUMO

The opportunistic fungal pathogen Candida albicans undergoes an unusual parasexual cycle wherein diploid cells mate to form tetraploid cells that can generate genetically diverse progeny via a nonmeiotic program of chromosome loss. The genetic diversity afforded by parasex impacts clinically relevant features including drug resistance and virulence, and yet the factors influencing genome instability in C. albicans are not well defined. To understand how environmental cues impact genome instability, we monitored ploidy change following tetraploid cell growth in a panel of different carbon sources. We found that growth in one carbon source, D-tagatose, led to high levels of genomic instability and chromosome loss in tetraploid cells. This sugar is a stereoisomer of L-sorbose which was previously shown to promote karyotypic changes in C. albicans. However, while expression of the SOU1 gene enabled utilization of L-sorbose, overexpression of this gene did not promote growth in D-tagatose, indicating differences in assimilation of the two sugars. In addition, genome sequencing of multiple progenies recovered from D-tagatose cultures revealed increased relative copy numbers of chromosome 4, suggestive of chromosome-level regulation of D-tagatose metabolism. Together, these studies identify a novel environmental cue that induces genome instability in C. albicans, and further implicate chromosomal changes in supporting metabolic adaptation in this species.


Assuntos
Candida albicans , Sorbose , Candida albicans/metabolismo , Sorbose/metabolismo , Tetraploidia , Açúcares da Dieta/metabolismo , Instabilidade Genômica , Poliploidia , Carbono/metabolismo
4.
Nat Commun ; 10(1): 4388, 2019 09 26.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31558727

RESUMO

Meiosis is a conserved tenet of sexual reproduction in eukaryotes, yet this program is seemingly absent from many extant species. In the human fungal pathogen Candida albicans, mating of diploid cells generates tetraploid products that return to the diploid state via a non-meiotic process of depolyploidization known as concerted chromosome loss (CCL). Here, we report that recombination rates are more than three orders of magnitude higher during CCL than during normal mitotic growth. Furthermore, two conserved 'meiosis-specific' factors play central roles in CCL as SPO11 mediates DNA double-strand break formation while both SPO11 and REC8 regulate chromosome stability and promote inter-homolog recombination. Unexpectedly, SPO11 also promotes DNA repair and recombination during normal mitotic divisions. These results indicate that C. albicans CCL represents a 'parameiosis' that blurs the conventional boundaries between mitosis and meiosis. They also reveal parallels with depolyploidization in mammalian cells and provide potential insights into the evolution of meiosis.


Assuntos
Candida albicans/genética , Diploide , Recombinação Homóloga/genética , Meiose/genética , Tetraploidia , Candidíase/microbiologia , Cromossomos Fúngicos/genética , Dano ao DNA , Endodesoxirribonucleases/genética , Endodesoxirribonucleases/metabolismo , Proteínas Fúngicas/genética , Proteínas Fúngicas/metabolismo , Humanos , Mitose/genética , Recombinases Rec A/genética , Recombinases Rec A/metabolismo , Reparo de DNA por Recombinação
5.
Cell Host Microbe ; 25(3): 418-431.e6, 2019 03 13.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30824263

RESUMO

Candida albicans is a commensal fungus of human gastrointestinal and reproductive tracts, but also causes life-threatening systemic infections. The balance between colonization and pathogenesis is associated with phenotypic plasticity, with alternative cell states producing different outcomes in a mammalian host. Here, we reveal that gene dosage of a master transcription factor regulates cell differentiation in diploid C. albicans cells, as EFG1 hemizygous cells undergo a phenotypic transition inaccessible to "wild-type" cells with two functional EFG1 alleles. Notably, clinical isolates are often EFG1 hemizygous and thus licensed to undergo this transition. Phenotypic change corresponds to high-frequency loss of the functional EFG1 allele via de novo mutation or gene conversion events. This phenomenon also occurs during passaging in the gastrointestinal tract with the resulting cell type being hypercompetitive for commensal and systemic infections. A "two-hit" genetic model therefore underlies a key phenotypic transition in C. albicans that enables adaptation to host niches.


Assuntos
Candida albicans/crescimento & desenvolvimento , Candida albicans/genética , Candidíase/microbiologia , Trato Gastrointestinal/microbiologia , Regulação Fúngica da Expressão Gênica , Mutação , Simbiose , Candida albicans/patogenicidade , Proteínas de Ligação a DNA/genética , Proteínas Fúngicas/genética , Dosagem de Genes , Humanos , Fatores de Transcrição/genética , Virulência
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