| Literature DB >> 19557154 |
Jeffrey J Coleman1, Eleftherios Mylonakis.
Abstract
Pathogens must be able to overcome both host defenses and antimicrobial treatment in order to successfully infect and maintain colonization of the host. One way fungi accomplish this feat and overcome intercellular toxin accumulation is efflux pumps, in particular ATP-binding cassette transporters and transporters of the major facilitator superfamily. Members of these two superfamilies remove many toxic compounds by coupling transport with ATP hydrolysis or a proton gradient, respectively. Fungal genomes encode a plethora of members of these families of transporters compared to other organisms. In this review we discuss the role these two fungal superfamilies of transporters play in virulence and resistance to antifungal agents. These efflux transporters are responsible not only for export of compounds involved in pathogenesis such as secondary metabolites, but also export of host-derived antimicrobial compounds. In addition, we examine the current knowledge of these transporters in resistance of pathogens to clinically relevant antifungal agents.Entities:
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Year: 2009 PMID: 19557154 PMCID: PMC2695561 DOI: 10.1371/journal.ppat.1000486
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Pathog ISSN: 1553-7366 Impact factor: 6.823
Summary of Transporters Involved in Virulence or Toxin and Drug Efflux.
| Transporter Family | Name | Fungus | Description/Substrate | Amino Acid Length | References |
|
| |||||
| PDR/ABCG | CDR1 |
| Triazole resistance | 1500 |
|
| PDR/ABCG | CDR2 |
| Triazole resistance | 1499 |
|
| PDR/ABCG | CgCDR1 |
| Fluconazole, itraconazole | 1542 |
|
| PDR/ABCG | CgCDR2/PDH1 |
| Fluconazole, ketoconazole | 1499 |
|
| PDR/ABCG | CgSNQ2 |
| Fluconazole, itraconazole | 1507 |
|
| PDR/ABCG | AFR1 |
| Triazole resistance | 1543 |
|
| PDR/ABCG |
|
| Unknown function | 1619 |
|
| PDR/ABCG |
|
| Rishitin tolerance | 1491 |
|
| PDR/ABCG |
|
| Unknown function | 1635 |
|
| PDR/ABCG |
|
| Resveratrol tolerance | 1439 |
|
| MRP/ABCC |
|
| Unknown function, possibly bile | 1606 |
|
|
| |||||
| DHA14 | TOXA |
| HC-toxin secretion | 548 |
|
| DHA14 | TRI12 |
| Trichothecene T-2 secretion | 598 |
|
| DHA14 |
|
| Cercosporin secretion | 607 |
|
| DHA12 |
|
| Cercosporin secretion | 512 |
|
| DHA12 | cefT |
| Cephalosporin secretion | 561 |
|
| DHA14 |
|
| Unknown function | 592 |
|
| DHA12 | MDR1 |
| Fluconazole resistance | 564 |
|
| DHA12 | FLU1 |
| Fluconazole resistance | 610 |
|
| DHA12 | CdMDR1 |
| Fluconazole resistance | 557 |
|
| DHA12 | TMP1 |
| MDR | 561 |
|
| DHA12 | TMP2 |
| MDR | 581 |
|
Transporters involved in virulence are in bold.
Number of ABC and MFS Transporters in Sequenced Fungal and Oomycete Genomes.
| Classification | Fungus | ABC | MFS |
|
|
| 160 | 102 |
|
| 185 | 113 | |
|
| 190 | 109 | |
|
|
| 52 | 23 |
|
|
| 44 | 111 |
|
|
| 38 | 91 |
|
| 26 | 35 | |
|
| 29 | 192 | |
|
| 32 | 159 | |
|
| 47 | 95 | |
|
| 56 | 113 | |
|
| |||
| Taphrinomycotina |
| 9 | 58 |
| Saccharomycotina |
| 24 | 85 |
|
| 21 | 85 | |
| Eurotiomycetes |
| 45 | 356 |
|
| 45 | 275 | |
|
| 51 | 416 | |
|
| 30 | 146 | |
|
| 28 | 103 | |
|
| 33 | 86 | |
|
| 45 | 178 | |
| Dothideomycetes |
| 46 | 301 |
| Leotiomycetes |
| 44 | 169 |
|
| 51 | 204 | |
| Sordariomycetes |
| 50 | 251 |
|
| 41 | 155 | |
|
| 31 | 141 | |
|
| 56 | 335 | |
The number of transporters in each genome was calculated from either the genome publication (P. chrysosporium, P. chrysogenum), the TransporterDB (P. infestans, P. ramorum, P. sojae, C. neoformans JEC21, S. pombe, S. cerevisiae, A. nidulans, A. fumigatus, C. posadasii, N. crassa) or from searching the Broad Fungal Genome Initiative Web site (http://www.broad.mit.edu/node/304) for the PFAM domains corresponding to the transporter.
The number of ABC transporters from genomes from the Broad Fungal Genome Initiative includes the number of ABCE and ABCF proteins (usually 4–5 members), as they contain the conserved sequence; however, they are not transporters.
Figure 1Schematic representation of the two main fungal transporters responsible for efflux of toxic compounds.
Representation of an ABC transporter of the PDR family (A) and an MFS transporter of the DHA12 family (B). The NBDs of the ABC transporter are depicted in red, while the TMDs important for substrate specificity are colored green and gold for the ABC and MFS transporters, respectively.