Literature DB >> 29158264

Azole resistance in a Candida albicans mutant lacking the ABC transporter CDR6/ROA1 depends on TOR signaling.

Nitesh Kumar Khandelwal1,2, Neeraj Chauhan3, Parijat Sarkar4, Brooke D Esquivel5, Paola Coccetti6,7, Ashutosh Singh1,8, Alix T Coste9, Meghna Gupta1,10, Dominique Sanglard9, Theodore C White5, Murielle Chauvel11, Christophe d'Enfert11, Amitabha Chattopadhyay4, Naseem A Gaur2, Alok Kumar Mondal1, Rajendra Prasad12,13.   

Abstract

ATP-binding cassette (ABC) transporters help export various substrates across the cell membrane and significantly contribute to drug resistance. However, a recent study reported an unusual case in which the loss of an ABC transporter in Candida albicans, orf19.4531 (previously named ROA1), increases resistance against antifungal azoles, which was attributed to an altered membrane potential in the mutant strain. To obtain further mechanistic insights into this phenomenon, here we confirmed that the plasma membrane-localized transporter (renamed CDR6/ROA1 for consistency with C. albicans nomenclature) could efflux xenobiotics such as berberine, rhodamine 123, and paraquat. Moreover, a CDR6/ROA1 null mutant, NKKY101, displayed increased susceptibility to these xenobiotics. Interestingly, fluorescence recovery after photobleaching (FRAP) results indicated that NKKY101 mutant cells exhibited increased plasma membrane rigidity, resulting in reduced azole accumulation and contributing to azole resistance. Transcriptional profiling revealed that ribosome biogenesis genes were significantly up-regulated in the NKKY101 mutant. As ribosome biogenesis is a well-known downstream phenomenon of target of rapamycin (TOR1) signaling, we suspected a link between ribosome biogenesis and TOR1 signaling in NKKY101. Therefore, we grew NKKY101 cells on rapamycin and observed TOR1 hyperactivation, which leads to Hsp90-dependent calcineurin stabilization and thereby increased azole resistance. This in vitro finding was supported by in vivo data from a mouse model of systemic infection in which NKKY101 cells led to higher fungal load after fluconazole challenge than wild-type cells. Taken together, our study uncovers a mechanism of azole resistance in C. albicans, involving increased membrane rigidity and TOR signaling.
© 2018 by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.

Entities:  

Keywords:  ABC transporter; Azole resistance; CDR6; TOR signaling; mTOR complex (mTORC); membrane transport; multidrug transporter; yeast

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2017        PMID: 29158264      PMCID: PMC5767851          DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M117.807032

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Biol Chem        ISSN: 0021-9258            Impact factor:   5.157


  83 in total

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