| Literature DB >> 27118591 |
Yuan Sun1, Christine Gadoury2, Matthew P Hirakawa3, Richard J Bennett3, Doreen Harcus2, Anne Marcil2, Malcolm Whiteway4.
Abstract
UNLABELLED: It has been proposed that the ancestral fungus was mating competent and homothallic. However, many mating-competent fungi were initially classified as asexual because their mating capacity was hidden behind layers of regulation. For efficient in vitro mating, the essentially obligate diploid ascomycete pathogen Candida albicans has to change its mating type locus from heterozygous MTLa/α to homozygous MTLa/a or MTLα/α and then undergo an environmentally controlled epigenetic switch to the mating-competent opaque form. These requirements greatly reduce the potential for C. albicans mating. Deletion of the Yci1 domain gene OFR1 bypasses the need for C. albicans cells to change the mating type locus from heterozygous to homozygous prior to switching to the opaque form and mating and allows homothallic mating of MTL heterozygous strains. This bypass is carbon source dependent and does not occur when cells are grown on glucose. Transcriptional profiling of ofr1 mutant cells shows that in addition to regulating cell type and mating circuitry, Ofr1 is needed for proper regulation of histone and chitin biosynthesis gene expression. It appears that OFR1 is a key regulator in C. albicans and functions in part to maintain the cryptic mating phenotype of the pathogen. IMPORTANCE: Candida albicans is a human fungal pathogen with a recently discovered, highly cryptic mating ability. For efficient mating, it has to lose heterozygosity at its mating type locus. Then, MTL homozygous strains can undergo an epigenetic switch to an elongated yeast state, termed the opaque form, and become mating competent. This infrequent two-step process greatly reduces the potential for mating; few strains are MTL homozygous, and the opaque state is unstable at the temperature of the mammalian host. C. albicans has a complex mechanism for mating that appears designed to ensure that mating is infrequent. Here, we have characterized a new gene, opaque-formation regulator 1 (OFR1). Deleting the OFR1 gene allows MTL A: /α strains to mate efficiently with either mating type or even mate homothallically. It is possible that downregulating OFR1 in the host environment could allow mating in C. albicans by a route that does not involve MTL homozygosis.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27118591 PMCID: PMC4850264 DOI: 10.1128/mBio.00465-16
Source DB: PubMed Journal: MBio Impact factor: 7.867
FIG 1 ofr1 mutants undergo white-opaque switching on YCB-GlcNAc. Cells were streaked on YCB-GlcNAc agar plates containing phloxine B; under these conditions, opaque colonies are stained pink (representative colonies are noted with arrows). The mating types of all the strains are heterozygous MTLa/α. The ofr1Δ/TetoffOFR1 (MTLa/α) strain is from the GRACE library and was streaked on a YCB-GlcNAc agar plate with 100 µg ml−1 tetracycline (OFR1 expression is repressed by tetracycline). The ofr1Δ/ofr1Δ null mutant is derived from the wild-type strain SN148. OFR1/OFR1 is SN148 as the control. These strains were all incubated at room temperature (RT) for 7 days before being scanned.
FIG 2 Bioinformatics analysis of OFR1. (A) Ortholog cluster of OFR1 (ORF19.5078). There are orthologs of OFR1 in most of the CTG clade of Candida species but no ortholog in S. cerevisiae and the close relatives of the budding yeast. The dendrogram on the left represents the phylogenetic tree of a selected set of ascomycetes. The genes shown on the right establish the syntenic arrangement of OFR1 and its orthologs in these species. In many species, the genes flanking the OFR1 orthologs are themselves orthologous, but in S. cerevisiae and close relatives, all three orthologous genes are missing or not syntenic in the genome. “Δ” indicates that the gene is absent from the genome, and “--” represents that the gene is elsewhere. (B) T-COFFEE protein analysis among several Yci1 domain proteins. The asterisk is used to label identical residues in the consensus sequence. The Yci1 domain has been proposed to have enzymatic function with putative active site residues Asp and His; the positions of these candidate active site residues are conserved in Ofr1 as D7 and H22, respectively, in the consensus (noted with arrows).
FIG 3 Microscopy. (A) Immunofluorescence microscopy of ofr1 cells. Cells were fixed with formaldehyde and washed with 1× PBS. Fixed cells were stored in 1× PBS at 4°C before immunofluorescence microscopy. F223-5E1-1 and F223-5H1-1 are two different monoclonal antibodies used in this study as primary antibodies to identify opaque cells (see Fig. S1 in the supplemental material). Texas Red-conjugated goat anti-mouse antibody was used as the secondary antibody. OP, opaque cells; WH, white cells. Samples were observed and photographed under the Nikon Eclipse TiE fluorescence microscope at ×400 magnification. Bar, 10 µm. (B) Scanning electron microscopy. Cells were fixed in glutaraldehyde as described in the text after growth on YCB-GlcNAc agar plates at 25°C for 72 h. The samples were coated with 20 nm of gold palladium in an Emitech K550 sputter coater. Cells were photographed under a scanning electron microscope at ×5,000 magnification. OFR1/OFR1 (WT) is the wild-type SN148 MTLa/α strain as the control. ofr1Δ/ofr1Δ-OP represents the opaque cell of the ofr1 null mutant.
Ratio of white-opaque switching
| Row | Strain | Carbon source | Switch ratio (%) | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Relevant genotype | Initial cell type | Starter colony | Scored cells | |||
| 1 | WT | WH | GlcNAc | GlcNAc | <0.05 | |
| 2 | Δ/Δ | WH | GlcNAc | GlcNAc | 1.92 | |
| 3 | WT | WH | GlcNAc | GlcNAc | 90.91 | |
| 4 | Δ/Δ | WH | GlcNAc | GlcNAc | 94.78 | |
| 5 | WT | WH | GlcNAc | Glucose | <0.01 | |
| 6 | Δ/Δ | WH | GlcNAc | Glucose | <0.05 | |
| 7 | Δ/Δ | WH | GlcNAc | Glucose + CO2 | <0.02 | |
| 8 | WT | WH | GlcNAc | Glucose | 4.91 | |
| 9 | Δ/Δ | WH | GlcNAc | Glucose | 3.93 | |
| 11 | Δ/Δ | OP | GlcNAc | GlcNAc | 68.21 | |
| 12 | WT | OP | GlcNAc | GlcNAc | 0.14 | |
| 13 | Δ/Δ | OP | GlcNAc | GlcNAc | <0.1 | |
| 14 | Δ/Δ | OP | GlcNAc | Glucose | 99.6 | |
| 15 | Δ/Δ | OP | GlcNAc | Glucose + CO2 | 99.5 | |
| 16 | WT | OP | GlcNAc | Glucose | 0.17 | |
| 17 | Δ/Δ | OP | GlcNAc | Glucose | 98.05 | |
Carbon sources used were GlcNAc and glucose. Strains were either white (WH) or opaque (OP). The ratios are based on at least 2 separate experiments; colony types were calculated from among 200 to 1,000 colonies in total after 7 days of incubation at room temperature.
FIG 4 Mating ability of ofr1 mutant. (A) An ofr1Δ/Δ strain undergoes mating with both wild-type MTL homozygous strains. Strains 3745a and 3315α, in the opaque state, were used as mating type testers. They had the auxotrophic markers trp1/trp1 and lys2/lys2. These testers were crossed with WT strains SN148 a/α (arg4/arg4 leu2/leu2 his1/his1 ura3::imm434/ura3::imm434), CAI4 a (ura3::imm434/ura3::imm434), and CAI4 α (ura3::imm434/ura3::imm434) and the ofr1 a/α null mutant (arg4/arg4 leu2/leu2) on GlcNAc medium at RT for 2 days and then replicated on selection medium YCB-glucose (Trp− Lys− Arg− Ura−) at 30°C for 3 days to detect auxotrophic mating products. (B) Pheromone response assays. Approximately 5 × 106 opaque cells of the highly pheromone-sensitive cpp1Δ/Δ MTLa/a strain were evenly streaked onto YCB-GlcNAc agar medium. Spots of the SN148 a/α (wild type, white cells) and ofr1 a/α (MTLa/α, opaque cells) strains were assessed for pheromone production. SN148 a/α represents the negative control. Single colonies of ofr1 a/α and SN148 a/α cells from GlcNAc agar medium were separately suspended in 20 µl MilliQ sterile water. Five microliters was used for spotting onto the hyperresponsive cell streaks, and the plate was incubated at 25°C for 48 h prior to scanning. (C) Homothallic mating of ofr1Δ/Δ cells Opaque cell colonies of the ofr1 a/α null mutant (arg4/arg4 leu2/leu2) and the ofr1 a/α GRACE1.0 (ura3/ura3) strains were mixed on GlcNAc medium for 2 days and then replicated on selection medium (Arg− Ura−) to detect auxotrophic mating products.
Quantitative mating assays
| Tester strain | Type | Exptl strain | Type | Mating frequency | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 3315 α | OP | WT | SN148 | WH | WT | <1.22 × 10−10 |
| 3315 α | OP | WT | SN148 | OP | WT | (9.3 1 ± 5.69) × 10−4 |
| 3315 α | OP | WT | OP | (1.15 ± 0.03) × 10−6 | ||
| 3315 α | OP | WT | OP | <1.02 × 10−10 | ||
| 3745 | OP | WT | SN148 | WH | WT | <5.78 × 10−10 |
| 3745 | OP | WT | OP | (4.06 ± 0.53) × 10−4 | ||
| 3745 | OP | WT | OP | (1.21 ± 0.18) × 10−2 | ||
| 3745 | OP | WT | OP | <1.44 × 10−9 | ||
| OP | OP | (9.80 ± 3.76) × 10−7 | ||||
| OP | OP | (1.27 ± 0.09) × 10−2 |
Tester strains and experimental strains were precultured in YCB-GlcNAc liquid medium for 24 h and then mixed in fresh YCB-GlcNAc liquid medium at a concentration of 1 × 107 cells/ml for both strains. Mixed cells were incubated at RT for 48 h and then plated onto selection medium to detect auxotrophic mating products. The mating frequency is calculated as described in Materials and Methods. OP, opaque; WH, white.
Highlighted significant genes in white cells of the ofr1 null mutant compared with white cells of the wild-type reference strain
| Category | Genes significant on: | |
|---|---|---|
| GlcNAc | Glucose | |
| White-opaque switching | ||
| Involved in mating and pheromone response | ||
| Other significant groups | ||
| Histone genes | ||
| Chitin synthesis genes | ||
| Alcohol dehydrogenase | ||
| SAPs and LIPs | ||
| Glucose transport | ||
| Carbohydrate metabolism | ||
Highlighted significant genes changed in expression for the a/α ofr1 null mutant in the white state compared with the wild-type a/α SN148 strain under both GlcNAc and glucose conditions. Microarrays were based on at least two replicates with dye swaps. Log2, >1 or <−1; P < 0.1. A downregulated gene is noted with an asterisk. For details, see Table S1 and Fig. S2 in the supplemental material.
Highlighted significant genes in opaque cells compared with white cells of the ofr1 null mutant
| Category | Genes significant on: | |
|---|---|---|
| GlcNAc | Glucose | |
| White-opaque switching | ||
| Krebs cycle genes | ||
| Involved in mating and pheromone response | ||
| Other significant groups | ||
| Histone genes | ||
| Chitin synthase | ||
| SAPs and LIPs | ||
| ALS family protein | ||
| Glucose transport | ||
| Carbohydrate metabolism | ||
| GlcNAc utilization | ||
Highlighted significant genes changed in the gene expressions of the ofr1 null mutant in opaque states compared with those in white states under both GlcNAc and glucose conditions. Microarray, based on at least two replicates with dye swaps. Log2, >1 or <−1; P < 0.1. Downregulated genes are noted with an asterisk. For details, see Table S2 and Fig. S4 in the supplemental material.