| Literature DB >> 28265742 |
Christina M Kelliher1, Steven B Haase2.
Abstract
Proliferation and host evasion are critical processes to understand at a basic biological level for improving infectious disease treatment options. The human fungal pathogen Cryptococcus neoformans causes fungal meningitis in immunocompromised individuals by proliferating in cerebrospinal fluid. Current antifungal drugs target "virulence factors" for disease, such as components of the cell wall and polysaccharide capsule in C. neoformans. However, mechanistic links between virulence pathways and the cell cycle are not as well studied. Recently, cell-cycle synchronized C. neoformans cells were profiled over time to identify gene expression dynamics (Kelliher et al., PLoS Genet 12(12):e1006453, 2016). Almost 20% of all genes in the C. neoformans genome were periodically activated during the cell cycle in rich media, including 40 genes that have previously been implicated in virulence pathways. Here, we review important findings about cell-cycle-regulated genes in C. neoformans and provide two examples of virulence pathways-chitin synthesis and G-protein coupled receptor signaling-with their putative connections to cell division. We propose that a "comparative functional genomics" approach, leveraging gene expression timing during the cell cycle, orthology to genes in other fungal species, and previous experimental findings, can lead to mechanistic hypotheses connecting the cell cycle to fungal virulence.Entities:
Keywords: Cell-cycle transcription; Cryptococcus neoformans; Gene regulatory networks; Virulence factors
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28265742 PMCID: PMC5605583 DOI: 10.1007/s00294-017-0688-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Genet ISSN: 0172-8083 Impact factor: 3.886
Fig. 1Timing of expression provides mechanistic insights for DNA replication, chitin synthase, and GPCR subunits during the C. neoformans and S. cerevisiae cell cycles. The MCM2-7 genes involved in DNA replication origin firing are plotted in C. neoformans (respectively: CNAG_03341, CNAG_00099, CNAG_06182, CNAG_04052, CNAG_03962, and CNAG_05825) (a) and S. cerevisiae (respectively: YBL023C, YEL032W, YPR019W, YLR274W, YGL201C, and YBR202W) (b) to visualize activation timing before S phase of the cell cycle. Chitin synthase genes in C. neoformans are expressed after S phase (c), while S. cerevisiae orthologs vary in their expression timing (d). C.n. CHS4 is orthologous to S.c. CHS3 (YBR023C, red c, d). Both CHS6 and CHS8 have orthology to CHS1 (YNL192W) and CHS2 (YBR038W) in S. cerevisiae. According to a global sequence similarity measure (Kelliher et al. 2016: S4 Table), C.n. CHS6 is most similar to S.c. CHS2 (green c, d), and C.n. CHS8 is more similar to S.c. CHS1 (blue c, d). GPCR subunits in C. neoformans are expressed at different times during the cell cycle (e), and S. cerevisiae orthologs are less periodic and vary in expression timing (f). C.n. GPA2 is orthologous to both S.c. GPA1 (YHR005C) and GPA2 (YER020W, red lines e, f), and GPG2 is orthologous to STE18 (YJR086W) in S. cerevisiae. In all plots, orthologous gene pairs are shown in the same color, and ortholog identification data can be found in the previous work (Kelliher et al. 2016: S4 Table, S1 File). Line plots are shown on an fpkm unit scale, which were normalized separately for each yeast experiment. All transcripts are plotted on a common cell-cycle timeline in CLOCCS lifeline points as described (Kelliher et al. 2016: S1 File). Periodicity rankings for each C. neoformans gene can be found in S2 Table, and S. cerevisiae genes can be found in S1 Table (Kelliher et al. 2016)