| Literature DB >> 22546903 |
Abstract
The human commensal fungus Candida albicans can cause not only superficial infections, but also life-threatening disease in immunocompromised individuals. C. albicans can grow in several morphological forms. The ability to switch between different phenotypic forms has been thought to contribute to its virulence. The yeast-filamentous growth transition and white-opaque switching represent two typical morphological switching systems, which have been intensively studied in C. albicans. The interplay between environmental factors and genes determines the morphology of C. albicans. This review focuses on the regulation of phenotypic changes in this pathogenic organism by external environmental cues and internal genes.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 22546903 PMCID: PMC3442837 DOI: 10.4161/viru.20010
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Virulence ISSN: 2150-5594 Impact factor: 5.882

Figure 1. Regulation of filamentous growth in C. albicans by multiple environmental cues and signal transduction pathways. The external inducers may function on the cell surface receptors or enter into the cell and directly bind the filamentous growth regulators. The transcription factors Flo8, Efg1 and Cph1 play a central role in the regulation of phenotypic transitions. Multiple signaling pathways converge on the three regulators. The cAMP/PKA pathway and its downstream regulators Flo8 and Efg1 can also play a negative role in filamentous development under embedded growth conditions. The general transcriptional repressor Tup1 is recruited by DNA-binding proteins Nrg1 and Rfg1 and targets on the promoters of hypha-specific genes.

Figure 2. Regulation of white-opaque transition in C. albicans. (A) Environmental factors regulate white-to-opaque and opaque-to-white transitions. (B) The cAMP/PKA pathway and Wor1 involved gene circuitry. The cAMP/PKA pathway regulates both CO2 and GlcNAc induced opaque cell formation. There is also an unidentified pathway mediated CO2 and GlcNAc sensing. The two pathways converge on the master regulator Wor1. The transcription factors Wor1, Wor2, Efg1 and Czf1 form a positive feedback loop controlling white-opaque switching. The inhibition of expression of WOR1 by the MTLa1/α2 heterozygous complex is also shown. The dashed line with an arrowhead represents the unidentified pathway involved in CO2 and GlcNAc sensing.
Table 1. Environmental cues and pathways involved in filamentous growth regulation in C. albicans
| Environmental cues | Pathways and regulators | Reference(s) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Serum, GlcNAc, starvation, poor nutrition (spider medium), glucose, | Ras1 → Cyr1, Bcy1 → cAMP → PKA (Tpk1 and Tpk2) → Efg1, Flo8 → hyphal specific genes (Hwp1, Ece1, etc.) | ||
| CO2 | Cyr1, Nce103 | ||
| Serum, spider medium | Ras1 → Cst20 → Cst11 → Hst7 → Cek1, Cek2 → Cph1, Tec1; Efh1; Hgc1; Ssn6; | ||
| pH | Rim101, Phr1, Phr2 | ||
| GlcNAc | Ngt1 → Hxk1 → Dac1 → Nag1 | ||
| Osmotic stress | Cst20 → Cst11 → Hst7 → Cek1, Hog1; | ||
| Physical interaction | Czf1, Mkc1 | ||
| Hypoxic conditions | Czf1, Efg1, Sch9 | ||
| Rapamycin | Tor1 | ||
| Farnesol | Ras1 → Cyr1, Bcy1 → cAMP → PKA (Tpk1 and Tpk2) → Efg1 | ||
| Hypoxic conditions | Cyr1, Efg1, Flo8 | ||
| Tup1, Nrg1, Rfg1, Rbf1 |