| Literature DB >> 25758825 |
Eugenio Mancera1, Allison M Porman2, Christina A Cuomo3, Richard J Bennett2, Alexander D Johnson4.
Abstract
Fungi from the genus Candida are common members of the human microbiota; however, they are also important opportunistic pathogens in immunocompromised hosts. Several morphological transitions have been linked to the ability of these fungi to occupy the different ecological niches in the human body. The transcription factor Efg1 from the APSES family plays a central role in the transcription circuits underlying several of these morphological changes. In Candida albicans, for example, Efg1 is a central regulator of filamentation, biofilm formation, and white-opaque switching, processes associated with survival in the human host. Orthologs of Efg1 are present throughout the Candida clade but, surprisingly, the genome sequence of Candida tropicalis failed to uncover a gene coding for Efg1. One possibility was that the paralog of Efg1, Efh1, had assumed the function of Efg1 in C. tropicalis. However, we show that this gene has only a minor role in the morphological transitions mentioned above. Instead, we report here that C. tropicalis does have an ortholog of the EFG1 gene found in other Candida species. The gene is located in a different genomic position than EFG1 in C. albicans, in a region that contains a gap in the current genome assembly of C. tropicalis. We show that the newly identified C. tropicalis EFG1 gene regulates filamentation, biofilm formation, and white-opaque switching. Our results highlight the conserved role of Efg1 in controlling morphogenesis in Candida species and remind us that published genome sequences are drafts that require continuous curation and careful scrutiny.Entities:
Keywords: Candida morphogenesis; biofilm; filamentation; phenotypic switch; transcriptional regulation
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25758825 PMCID: PMC4426371 DOI: 10.1534/g3.115.017566
Source DB: PubMed Journal: G3 (Bethesda) ISSN: 2160-1836 Impact factor: 3.154
Figure 1Genomic and phylogenetic position of EFG1 in C. tropicalis. (A) Schematic depiction of the genomic location of EFG1 in C. albicans and the corresponding genomic location in C. tropicalis. (B) As (A), but for C. tropicalis EFG1 and the corresponding location in C. albicans. In (A and B) the upper panel depicts C. albicans chromosomes (green background) and the lower panel depicts C. tropicalis chromosomes (blue background). Coordinates are in kb. One-to-one orthologs defined by CGOB are shown using the same color and are connected by dashed gray lines if in the same panel. The prefixes “orf19.” and “CTRG_” for C. albicans and C. tropicalis ORF names, respectively, were omitted. The white segment at the bottom of the C. tropicalis EFG1 gene depicts the location of the sequence gap. (C) Gene phylogeny of the EFG1 and EFH1 genes in the CTG clade and S. cerevisiae. Ortholog sequences were obtained from CGOB (Maguire ), aligned using MUSCLE, and a phylogenetic tree was generated using PhyML in Seaview (Gouy ). Branch support values are SH-like approximate likelihood ratios and the branch-length scale bar represents substitutions per site. Generating the tree by bootstrapping (100 trees) gave the same tree topology. The species relationships depicted in the cladogram (lower right) were obtained from (Maguire ).
Figure 2EFG1 is involved in filamentation and biofilm formation in C. tropicalis. (A) Formation of filamentous cells by wild-type and EFG1 deletion strains of C. tropicalis in the MYA3404 genetic background. Representative DIC microscopy images are shown for each time point. Scale bars are 5 μm. (B) Images of representative biofilms for EFG1 deletion mutants in C. albicans and C. trpicalis (two independent isolates) grown in wells of six-well polystyrene plates. (C) Biomass dry weights of the same strains shown in (B), grown in the same conditions. Error bars represent the SD of five replicates.
Figure 3EFG1 is essential to maintain the white state in C. tropicalis. (A) Photos of representative colony and cellular morphologies of the default states of the wild-type, heterozygous efg1Δ/EFG1, and homozygous efg1Δ/efg1Δ strains in C. tropicalis MYA3404 genetic background. Scale bars are 5 μm. w, white; i, intermediate; and o, opaque cell types are indicated. (B) Phenotype frequencies of the same strains starting from a population of white, intermediate, or opaque cells. Cells in these states were used because these were the default states for wild-type, efg1Δ/EFG1, and efg1Δ/efg1Δ cells, respectively. Error bars are the SD of five independent experiments.