| Literature DB >> 27246518 |
Yulong Zhang1, Li Tao2, Qiuyu Zhang1, Guobo Guan2, Clarissa J Nobile3, Qiushi Zheng1, Xuefen Ding1, Guanghua Huang4.
Abstract
Phenotypic plasticity, the ability to switch between different morphological types, plays critical roles in environmental adaptation, leading to infections, and allowing for sexual reproduction in pathogenic Candida species. Candida tropicalis, which is both an emerging human fungal pathogen and an environmental fungus, can switch between two heritable cell types termed white and opaque. In this study, we report the discovery of a novel phenotype in C. tropicalis, named the gray phenotype. Similar to Candida albicans and Candida dubliniensis, white, gray, and opaque cell types of C. tropicalis also form a tristable switching system, where gray cells are relatively small and elongated. In C. tropicalis, gray cells exhibit intermediate levels of mating competency and virulence in a mouse systemic infection model compared to the white and opaque cell types, express a set of cell type-enriched genes, and exhibit both common and species-specific biological features. The key regulators of white-opaque transitions, Wor1 and Efg1, are not required for the gray phenotype. A comparative study of the gray phenotypes in C. tropicalis, C. albicans, and C. dubliniensis provides clues to explain the virulence properties and niche preferences of C. tropicalis.Entities:
Keywords: Candida tropicalis; Efg1; Gray phenotype; Tristable phenotypic transitions; White-opaque switching; Wor1
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27246518 DOI: 10.1016/j.fgb.2016.05.006
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Fungal Genet Biol ISSN: 1087-1845 Impact factor: 3.495