| Literature DB >> 27807047 |
Michelle D Leach1,2, TaeHyung Kim3,4, Sonja E DiGregorio5, Cathy Collins2, Zhaolei Zhang2,3, Martin L Duennwald6, Leah E Cowen7.
Abstract
Disruption of protein quality control can be detrimental, having toxic effects on single cell organisms and contributing to neurodegenerative diseases such as Alzheimer's, Parkinson's and Huntington's in humans. Here, we examined the effects of polyglutamine (polyQ) aggregation in a major fungal pathogen of humans, Candida albicans, with the goal of identifying new approaches to disable this fungus. However, we discovered that expression of polyQ stretches up to 230Q had no effect on C. albicans ability to grow and withstand proteotoxic stress. Bioinformatics analysis demonstrates that C. albicans has a similarly glutamine-rich proteome to the unicellular fungus Saccharomyces cerevisiae, which exhibits polyQ toxicity with as few as 72Q. Surprisingly, global transcriptional profiles indicated no significant change upon induction of up to 230Q. Proteomic analysis highlighted two key interactors of 230Q, Sis1 and Sgt2; however, loss of either protein had no additional effect on C. albicans toxicity. Our data suggest that C. albicans has evolved powerful mechanisms to overcome the toxicity associated with aggregation-prone proteins, providing a unique model for studying polyQ-associated diseases.Entities:
Keywords: Aggregation; Candida albicans; PolyQ; Saccharomyces cerevisiae; Toxicity
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 27807047 PMCID: PMC5217127 DOI: 10.1534/g3.116.035675
Source DB: PubMed Journal: G3 (Bethesda) ISSN: 2160-1836 Impact factor: 3.154
C. albicans strains
| Strain | Genotype | Source |
|---|---|---|
| SN95 | ||
| CaLC3067 | This study | |
| CaLC3069 25Q-1 | This study | |
| CaLC3070 25Q-2 | This study | |
| CaLC3069 72Q-1 | This study | |
| CaLC3070 72Q-2 | This study | |
| CaLC3252 103Q-1 | This study | |
| CaLC3253 103Q-2 | This study | |
| CaLC3256 230Q-1 | This study | |
| CaLC3257 230Q-2 | This study | |
| W303a | ||
| 25Q | ||
| 72Q | ||
| 103Q | ||
| 103Q | ||
| CaLC4012 | This study | |
| CaLC4088 | This study | |
| CaLC4082 | This study | |
| CaLC4083 | This study | |
| CaLC4084 | This study | |
| CaLC4385 | This study | |
| CaLC4397 | This study | |
| CaLC4398 | This study | |
| CaLC4399 | This study | |
| CaLC4400 | This study | |
| CaLC4450 | This study | |
| CaLC4462 | This study | |
| CaLC4463 | This study | |
| CaLC4464 | This study | |
| CaLC4465 | This study | |
| CaLC3491 BWP17 + CIp30 | This study | |
| CaLC4483 BWP17+103Q-1 | This study | |
| CaLC4484 BWP17+103Q-2 | This study | |
| CaLC4485 BWP17+230Q-1 | This study | |
| CaLC4486 BWP17+230Q-2 | This study | |
| CaLC2369 | This study | |
| CaLC4487 | This study | |
| CaLC4488 | This study | |
| CaLC4489 | This study | |
| CaLC4490 | This study |
Figure 1Expression of up to 230Q does not cause aggregation in C. albicans. (A) Western blot analysis using the FLAG epitope of wild-type (WT) and two independent strains harboring 103Q or 230Q expression constructs under the control of the tetracycline ON promoter. Protein expression was monitored after a total of 30 hr induction [−, no doxycycline (dox); +, 50 μg/ml dox]. White arrow = 103Q, black arrow = 230Q. (B) Live cell red fluorescent protein (RFP) (middle) and differential interference contrast (DIC) (left) microscopy of WT, and strains harboring 103Q or 230Q expression constructs in the absence (No dox) or presence (+ dox) of 50 μg/ml dox. Inset: magnification of a subset of cells representing polyQ expression. Scale bar, 20 μm. (C) Semidenaturating detergent agarose gel electrophoresis analysis of aggregated proteins expressed from S. cerevisiae WT, 103Q in rnqΔ, and 130Q in [RNQ+] grown in minimal medium with glucose (not inducing) or galactose (inducing) (lanes 1–6), C. albicans WT, and strains harboring 103Q or 230Q expression constructs grown in yeast peptone dextrose medium in the absence (−, not inducing) or presence (+, inducing) of 50 μg/ml dox. Detection via the N-terminal FLAG-tag.
Figure 2Expression of up to 230Q in combination with proteotoxic stressors does not cause toxicity in C. albicans. (A) Wild-type (WT) and strains harboring 103Q or 230Q expression were monitored after a total of 30 hr induction (−, no doxycycline (dox); +, 50 μg/ml dox) before being serially diluted ten-fold and spotted onto YPD solid medium, grown at 30°, and imaged after 48 hr. (B) Toxicity of S. cerevisiae WT, 103Q in rnqΔ, and 103Q in [RNQ+] compared to C. albicans WT and strains harboring 103Q or 230Q expression constructs was assessed in the presence of a tunicamycin (Tm) gradient from 0 to 10 μg/ml, in twofold dilutions in YPD with (inducing) or without (not inducing) 50 μg/ml dox or minimal medium with glucose (not inducing) or galactose (inducing). Growth was measured after 48 hr static incubation by absorbance at 600 nm and normalized relative to the no Tm control. For each strain, optical densities were averaged for duplicate measurements and displayed quantitatively using Treeview, as shown in the color bar. Data are representative for three biological replicates. (C) Toxicity of the C. albicans strains harboring 103Q and 230Q was assessed in the presence of proteotoxic stressors. Gradients were performed in twofold dilutions, and strains set up in YPD in the absence (no dox) or presence of 50 μg/ml dox. Growth was measured after 48 hr static incubation at 30° by absorbance at 600 nm and normalized relative to the untreated control. AzC, azetidine-2-carboxylic acid; GdA, geldanamycin; GnHCl, guanidine hydrochloride. (D) Dot blots were performed to determine the expression levels of 103Q in S. cerevisiae, and 103Q and 230Q in C. albicans. Protein lysates were serially diluted in PBS and loaded on the dot blot apparatus assembled with a nitrocellulose membrane. Blot quantification was carried out using Bio-Rad Image Lab 5.2 software following the blot scan. PolyQ expression levels have been normalized to the corresponding loading control (PSTAIRE). S. cerevisiae 103Q was set to 1. 103Q expression in C. albicans is 2.5 times greater than in S. cerevisiae, and 230Q is 23 times greater. AzC, azetidine-2-carboxylic acid; GdA, geldanamycin; GnHCl, guanidine hydrochloride.
Figure 3Expression of polyQ does not affect the transcriptome of C. albicans. (A) C. albicans wild-type (WT) and strains harboring 103Q or 230Q expression constructs were grown at 30° (no heat shock [HS]) or subjected to a 10 min 30–42° HS, in the absence (−) and presence (+) of 50 μg/ml doxycycline (dox) to induce polyQ expression; transcript levels of target genes were measured and normalized to the ACT1 loading control. Data represent mean values ± SD from two independent biological replicates. (B) Heat map illustrating the Pearson correlation of RNA sequencing (RNA-seq) global gene expression between WT and strains harboring 103Q or 230Q expression constructs in the absence and presence of 50 μg/ml dox to induce polyQ expression.
PolyQ interactors
| Protein | Role | PolyQ | PolyN |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sis1 | Putative type II HSP40 cochaperone | N/A | N/A |
| Sgt2 | Putative small tetratricopeptide repeat (TPR)-containing protein | N/A | N/A |
| Hap2 | CCAAT-binding transcription factor; regulates low-iron induction of FRP1 | 13 | 9 |
| Tbp1 | Transcription initiation factor; binds TATA box sequence | N/A | N/A |
| Pfa4 | Palmitoyltransferase with autoacylation activity; required for palmitoylation of amino acid permeases | N/A | N/A |
| Tim17 | Predicted component of the Translocase of the Inner Mitochondrial membrane (TIM23 complex), involved in protein import into mitochondria | N/A | N/A |
| Rad51 | Protein involved in homologous recombination and DNA repair | N/A | N/A |
| Orf19.11473 | Ortholog(s) have DNA-directed RNA polymerase activity, RNA polymerase III activity and role in tRNA (transfer RNA) transcription from RNA polymerase III promoter, transcription initiation from RNA polymerase III promoter | N/A | N/A |
N/A, not applicable.
Figure 4Deletion of polyQ protein interactors does not increase toxicity or aggregation. (A) Protein interactors of 230Q. Histogram depicting the normalized total spectra count of proteins found to interact with 230Q in two biological replicates (230Q-1 and 230Q-2). (B) Toxicity in wild-type (WT) and independent sis1Δ/sis1Δ or sgt2Δ/sgt2Δ mutants, harboring 103Q or 230Q expression constructs, was assessed in the presence of a tunicamycin (Tm) gradient from 0 to 10 μg/ml, in twofold dilutions in YPD with or without 50 μg/ml doxycycline (dox) at 30 or 42°. Growth was measured after 48 hr of static incubation by absorbance at 600 nm and normalized relative to the no Tm control. For each strain, optical densities were averaged for duplicate measurements and displayed quantitatively using Treeview, as shown in the color bar. Data are representative for three biological replicates. (C) Live cell microscopy of 103Q and 230Q in sis1Δ/sis1Δ or sgt2Δ/sgt2Δ mutants grown at 42°. Scale bar, 10 μm. (D) Toxicity of WT and independent hsp104Δ/hsp104Δ or ubi4Δ/ubi4Δ mutants harboring 103Q or 230Q expression constructs was assessed in the presence of a Tm gradient from 0 to 10 μg/ml, in twofold dilutions in YPD with or without 50 μg/ml dox at 30 or 42°. Growth was measured after 48 hr of static incubation by absorbance at 600 nm and normalized relative to the no Tm control. For each strain, optical densities were averaged for duplicate measurements and displayed quantitatively using Treeview, as shown in the color bar. Data are representative for three biological replicates. (E) Live cell microscopy of 103Q and 230Q in hsp104Δ/hsp104Δ or ubi4Δ/ubi4Δ mutants grown at 42°. Scale bar, 10 μm. DIC, differential interference contrast; RFP, red fluorescent protein.
Figure 5Expression of up to 230Q in mutants involved in protein quality control does not cause aggregation in C. albicans. Semidenaturating detergent agarose gel electrophoresis analysis of aggregated proteins expressed from C. albicans wild type (WT) and different mutant backgrounds harboring 103Q or 230Q expression constructs at 30° (top) vs. 42° (bottom). S. cerevisiae 103Q in rnqΔ and [RNQ+] were grown at 30° only and were included as a control. Detection via the N-terminal FLAG-tag.
Figure 6Bioinformatic analysis reveals similar features between S. cerevisiae and C. albicans Q/N-rich proteome. Length distribution of glutamine and asparagine runs in S. cerevisiae and C. albicans, with both species containing one protein with ≤40 glutamines in a row or ≤30 asparagines in a row.