| Literature DB >> 21269335 |
Michelle D Leach1, David A Stead, Evelyn Argo, Donna M MacCallum, Alistair J P Brown.
Abstract
Post-translational modifications of proteins play key roles in eukaryotic growth, differentiation and environmental adaptation. In model systems the ubiquitination of specific proteins contributes to the control of cell cycle progression, stress adaptation and metabolic reprogramming. We have combined molecular, cellular and proteomic approaches to examine the roles of ubiquitination in Candida albicans, because little is known about ubiquitination in this major fungal pathogen of humans. Independent null (ubi4/ubi4) and conditional (MET3p-UBI4/ubi4) mutations were constructed at the C. albicans polyubiquitin-encoding locus. These mutants displayed morphological and cell cycle defects, as well as sensitivity to thermal, oxidative and cell wall stresses. Furthermore, ubi4/ubi4 cells rapidly lost viability under starvation conditions. Consistent with these phenotypes, proteins with roles in stress responses (Gnd1, Pst2, Ssb1), metabolism (Acs2, Eno1, Fba1, Gpd2, Pdx3, Pgk1, Tkl1) and ubiquitination (Ubi4, Ubi3, Pre1, Pre3, Rpt5) were among the ubiquitination targets we identified, further indicating that ubiquitination plays key roles in growth, stress responses and metabolic adaptation in C. albicans. Clearly ubiquitination plays key roles in the regulation of fundamental cellular processes that underpin the pathogenicity of this medically important fungus. This was confirmed by the observation that the virulence of C. albicans ubi4/ubi4 cells is significantly attenuated.Entities:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 21269335 PMCID: PMC3084552 DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2958.2011.07542.x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Microbiol ISSN: 0950-382X Impact factor: 3.501
Fig. 1Downregulation of polyubiquitin expression in conditional C. albicans MET3p-UBI4/ubi4 mutants does not prevent growth.A. Construction of the methionine-conditional C. albicans mutants MLC05 and MLC14 from the parental strain BWP17 (Table 1). One UBI4 allele was disrupted by insertional inactivation using the loxP-ARG4-loxP cassette, and the other allele was placed under the control of the MET3 promoter. Cartoons represent these alleles, and the arrows indicate the lengths of the corresponding diagnostic PCR products on the agarose gel: PCR reactions 1: primers MET3p-F and UBI4d-R (Supporting information– Primers); PCR reactions 2: primers MET3p-F and UBI4d2-R; PCR reactions 3: primers UBI4d-F and LALd-R; PCR reactions 4: primers UBI4d-F and UBI4d2-R.B. Growth of conditional C. albicans MET3p-UBI4/ubi4 mutants in the presence of methionine and cysteine on plates. YPD plates contained (+) or lacked (−) 2.5 mM methionine (Met) and cysteine (Cys): UBI4/UBI4 (BWP17); MET3p-UBI4/UBI4 (MLC03); MET3p-UBI4/ubi4 (MLC05) (Table 1).C. qRT-PCR quantification of UBI4 mRNA levels, measured relative to the internal ACT1 mRNA control, in cells grown with 2.5 mM Met/Cys for 4 h. Independent MET3p-UBI4/UBI4 (MLC03, MLC12) and MET3p-UBI4/ubi4 strains (MLC05, MLC14) were analysed.
Candida albicans strains.
| Strain | Genotype | Source |
|---|---|---|
| BWP17 | ||
| THE1 | ||
| MLC03 | This study | |
| MLC05 | This study | |
| MLC12 | This study | |
| MLC14 | This study | |
| MLC35 | This study | |
| MLC36 | This study | |
| MLC40 | This study | |
| MLC41 | This study | |
| MLC42 | This study | |
| MLC60 | This study | |
| MLC61 | This study | |
| MLC125 | This study |
Fig. 2Polyubiquitin is not essential in C. albicans.A. The genotype of C. albicans ubi4/ubi4 mutants was confirmed by Southern blotting of HindIII digested C. albicans genomic DNA with PCR-amplified probes against the UBI4, ARG4 and URA3 open reading frames: UBI4/UBI4 (BWP17); UBI4/ubi4 (MLC35 and MLC36); ubi4/ubi4 (MLC40, MLC41, MLC42) (Table 1).B. Growth of C. albicans ubi4/ubi4 mutants in liquid YPD at 30°C: UBI4/UBI4, grey diamonds (BWP17); UBI4/ubi4, open squares (MLC35); ubi4/ubi4, closed triangles and closed squares (MLC40, MLC41).C. Colonial growth of C. albicans ubi4 mutants: UBI4/UBI4 (BWP17); UBI4/ubi4 (MLC35); ubi4/ubi4 (MLC40). Images were taken with the same magnification.
Fig. 3Inactivation or downregulation of polyubiquitin affects C. albicans cell morphology.A. Light microscopy of C. albicans ubi4/ubi4 cells grown in YPD at 30°C reveals morphological abnormalities: UBI4/UBI4 (BWP17); ubi4/ubi4 (MLC40) (Table 1).B. Downregulation of UBI4 in C. albicans MET3p-UBI4/ubi4 cells with 2.5 mM methionine and cysteine (Met/Cys) essentially phenocopies the ubi4/ubi4 null mutants: UBI4/UBI4 (BWP17); MET3p-UBI4/ubi4 (MLC05).C. Calcofluor White staining of C. albicans ubi4/ubi4 cells reveals true hypha formation in some cells: UBI4/UBI4 (BWP17); UBI4/ubi4 (MLC35); ubi4/ubi4 (MLC40).Images were taken at the same magnification and with the same exposures.
Fig. 4Inactivation of polyubiquitin affects C. albicans nuclear segregation.A. DAPI staining of C. albicans ubi4/ubi4 cells grown in YPD at 30°C reveals defects in mitosis and aberrant nuclear segregation in some cells: UBI4/UBI4 (BWP17); UBI4/ubi4 (MLC35); ubi4/ubi4 (MLC40).B. DAPI and Calcofluor White staining of ubi4/ubi4 cells under hypha-inducing conditions highlights the extent to which nuclear segregation is incomplete: UBI4/UBI4 (BWP17); UBI4/ubi4 (MLC35); ubi4/ubi4 (MLC40).C. Percentage of cells with aberrant nuclear segregation: UBI4/UBI4 (BWP17); UBI4/ubi4 (MLC35); ubi4/ubi4 (MLC40). **P < 0.01.
Fig. 5Candida albicans polyubiquitin mutants are sensitive to a range of stresses.A. Sensitivity of an ubi4/ubi4 null mutant to stresses: UBI4/UBI4 (BWP17); ubi4/ubi4 (MLC40) (Table 1). Serial dilutions of exponentially growing cells were spotted onto YPD plates containing the appropriate stress at the following concentrations and examined after 48 h: H2O2 (5 mM), NaCl (1 M), Calcofluor White (20 µg ml−1), Congo Red (100 µg ml−1), tunicamycin (4.73 mM), caspofungin (0.064 µg ml−1) and thermal stress (37°C and 42°C).
Fig. 6Inactivating polyubiquitin affects adaptation to nutrient starvation in C. albicans. Mid-exponential C. albicans cells were resuspended in minimal medium lacking a carbon and/or nitrogen source, and viability monitored thereafter (Experimental procedures): UBI4/UBI4, grey diamonds (BWP17); UBI4/ubi4, open squares (MLC35); ubi4/ubi4, closed triangles and closed squares (MLC40, MLC41) (Table 1).A. Carbon plus nitrogen starvation, where cells were incubated in water.B. Carbon starvation in YNB-C.C. Nitrogen starvation in YNB-N.
Fig. 7Many C. albicans proteins are ubiquitinated in a polyubiquitin-dependent fashion.A. Protein ubiquitination in wild-type C. albicans cells under different stress conditions. C. albicans THE1 was grown for 5 h and then exposed to the specified stress for 1 h (Experimental procedures). Protein extracts were prepared and analysed by Western blotting with an α-ubiquitin antibody.B. Impact of UBI4 inactivation upon protein ubiquitination in C. albicans. UBI4/UBI4 (THE1), UBI4/ubi4 (MLC35) and ubi4/ubi4 (MLC40) cells were grown for 5 h and then stressed for 1 h with heat or peroxide (Experimental procedures). Protein extracts were prepared and analysed by Western blotting. To control for loading, membranes were stripped and reprobed for Hsp90. Closed arrows highlight bands observed in wild-type cells that are absent following UBI4 inactivation, and the open arrow indicates a band observed in heat stressed cells that is absent in the ubi4/ubi4 mutant. The bracket indicates numerous ubiquitinated proteins, the levels of which are decreased in ubi4/ubi4 cells.C. Quantification of protein levels in the heterozygous UBI4/ubi4 (MLC35) and null ubi4/ubi4 (MLC40) strains under the three conditions tested.
Fig. 8Identification of ubiquitinated proteins in C. albicans using a proteomic screen. C. albicans THE1 cells were grown for 5 h to mid-exponential phase and then exposed to stress for 1 h. Protein extracts were run on replicate 2-D gels, which were either stained with Coomassie blue or subjected to Western blotting with an α-ubiquitin antibody: Western blots of no stress control; peroxide-treated cells (50 mM H2O2); heat-shocked cells (30–42°C). Autoradiographs were aligned with the Coomassie-stained gels, spots chosen for analysis, and the corresponding proteins identified by tryptic digestion and LC-MS/MS (see text). The sample reference numbers for ubiquitination targets are shown (Table 2).
Identification of ubiquitinated proteins in C. albicans.
| Sample ref | Accession number | Protein name | Molec. Wt. (Da) | pI | Function | Ubiquitinated in | Ubiquitination detected in absence of stress? | Predicted ubiquitination site(s) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Constitutively ubiquitinated | ||||||||
| 1 | Ca2937 | RPS21B | 8 807 | 8.85 | Ribosomal protein S21 | ND | Yes | Medium confidence, position 5 |
| 2 | Ca1691 | PGK1 | 45 266 | 6.07 | Phosphoglycerate kinase | Yes | Yes | Medium confidence, position 6; low confidence, position 296 |
| 3 | Ca5180 | FBA1 | 39 362 | 5.69 | Fructose-bisphosphate aldolase | Yes | Yes | Medium confidence, position 72 and 192; low confidence, position 77 |
| 4 | Ca2939 | TIF1 | 44 742 | 5.22 | Translation initiation factor | Yes | Yes | Low confidence, position 24 |
| 4 | Ca0824 | GPD2 | 41 174 | 5.21 | Glycerol-3-phosphate dehydrogenase | Yes | Yes | Low confidence, position 274 and 318 |
| Increased ubiquitination in response to heat | ||||||||
| 5 | Ca3874 | ENO1 | 47 202 | 5.54 | Enolase | Yes | Yes | High confidence, position 273; medium confidence, position 265; low confidence, position 432 |
| 6 | Ca4389 | RPT5 | 47 814 | 5.25 | Regulatory particle triphosphatase | Yes | Yes | Medium confidence, position 55, 63, 163, 170, 284 and 290; low confidence, position 35 and 92 |
| 7 | Ca3924 | TKL1 | 73 841 | 5.48 | Transketolase | Yes | No | Low confidence, position 351 |
| 8 | Ca2895 | PRN4 | 37 072 | 5.31 | Putative pirin by homology | ND | No | High confidence, position 315; medium confidence, position 234; low confidence, position 240, 320 and 327 |
| 9 | Ca5239 | GND1 | 57 159 | 6.14 | 6-Phosphogluconate dehydrogenase | Yes | No | Medium confidence, position 6; low confidence, position 151 and 388 |
| 9 | Ca2011 | UBI3 | 17 485 | 9.86 | Functional homologue of | ND | No | Medium confidence, position 105 |
| 10 | Ca0210 | orf19.5525 | 37 783 | 5.53 | Putative NADP(H) oxidoreductase | ND | No | Medium confidence, position 285; low confidence, position 268 and 344 |
| Increased ubiquitination in response to H2O2 | ||||||||
| 11 | Ca4261 | PDX3 | 28 773 | 6.02 | Pyridoxine (pyridoxamine) phosphate oxidase | Yes | No | Medium confidence, position 22 and 58 |
| 12 | Ca2675 | GSP1 | 24 470 | 6.53 | Small RAN G-protein | Yes | No | Medium confidence, position 193 |
| 12 | Ca5932 | UBI4 | 25 776 | 7.76 | Ubiquitin precursor (polyubiquitin) | Yes | No | Low confidence, position 33, 48, 63, 139, 179 and 215 |
| 13 | Ca1673 | PST2 | 21 714 | 6.51 | NADH : quinone oxidoreductase | Yes | No | None |
| 13 | Ca5037 | PRE3 | 23 629 | 6.42 | Beta-1 subunit of proteasome | ND | No | Low confidence, position 12 |
| 14 | Ca4791 | PRE1 | 22 119 | 6.43 | β4 subunit of the 20S proteasome | ND | No | Low confidence, position 19 |
| 14 | Ca4589 | ASC1 | 23 619 | 6.3 | 40S ribosomal subunit protein | Yes | No | None |
| 14 | Ca5932 | UBI4 | 25 776 | 7.76 | Ubiquitin precursor (polyubiquitin) | Yes | No | Low confidence, position 33, 48, 63, 139, 179 and 215 |
| Increased ubiquitination in response to heat and H2O2 | ||||||||
| 15 | CA3534 | SSB1 | 66 580 | 5.25 | HSP70 family chaperone | Yes | No | High confidence, position 528 and 545; medium confidence, position 521, 530, 543 and 597; low confidence, position 191, 314 and 393 |
| 16 | Ca1246 | IMH3 | 40 055 | 6.67 | Inosine monophosphate (IMP) dehydrogenase | ND | No | Medium confidence, position 7; low confidence, position 24, 175, 230 and 517 |
| 17 | Ca3546 | ACO1 | 84 625 | 5.96 | Aconitase | ND | No | Medium confidence, position 25. |
| 18 | Ca2858 | ACS2 | 74 215 | 5.73 | Acetyl-CoA synthetase | Yes | No | Medium confidence, position 32 and 596; low confidence, position 17 and 583 |
| 19 | Ca2470 | SDH12 | 70 930 | 6.03 | Flavoprotein subunit of succinate dehydrogenase | ND | No | Medium confidence, position 480; low confidence, position 417, 492 and 500 |
Protein detected with ubiquitin sequences.
ND, not detected.
Fig. 9Inactivation of polyubiquitin significantly attenuates the virulence of C. albicans in a mouse model of systemic candidiasis.A. Kidney burdens measured at 72 h post infection (means and standard deviations for six animals): UBI4/UBI4, MLC125, white bar; ubi4/ubi4, MLC60, black bar; ubi4/ubi4/UBI4, MLC61, grey bar (Table 1).B. Infection outcome scores calculated after 3 days (means and standard deviations for six animals), where higher outcome scores reflect more severe infection.In both panels, **P < 0.01.