| Literature DB >> 29532896 |
Qingdi Quentin Li1, Huei-Fung Tsai1, Ajeet Mandal2, Bryan A Walker1, Jason A Noble1, Yuichi Fukuda1, John E Bennett1.
Abstract
Pathogenic fungi, including Candida glabrata, develop strategies to grow and survive both in vitro and in vivo under azole stress. However, the mechanisms by which yeast cells counteract the inhibitory effects of azoles are not completely understood. In the current study, it was demonstrated that the expression of the ergosterol biosynthetic genes ERG2, ERG3, ERG4, ERG10, and ERG11 was significantly upregulated in C. glabrata following fluconazole treatment. Inhibiting ergosterol biosynthesis using fluconazole also increased the expression of the sterol influx transporter AUS1 and the sterol metabolism regulators SUT1 and UPC2 in fungal cells. The microarray study quantified 35 genes with elevated mRNA levels, including AUS1, TIR3, UPC2, and 8 ERG genes, in a C. glabrata mutant strain lacking ERG1, indicating that sterol importing activity is increased to compensate for defective sterol biosynthesis in cells. Bioinformatic analyses further revealed that those differentially expressed genes were involved in multiple cellular processes and biological functions, such as sterol biosynthesis, lipid localization, and sterol transport. Finally, to assess whether sterol uptake affects yeast susceptibility to azoles, we generated a C. glabrata aus1∆ mutant strain. It was shown that loss of Aus1p in C. glabrata sensitized the pathogen to azoles and enhanced the efficacy of drug exposure under low oxygen tension. In contrast, the presence of exogenous cholesterol or ergosterol in medium rendered the C. glabrata AUS1 wild‑type strain highly resistant to fluconazole and voriconazole, suggesting that the sterol importing mechanism is augmented when ergosterol biosynthesis is suppressed in the cell, thus allowing C. glabrata to survive under azole pressure. On the basis of these results, it was concluded that sterol uptake and sterol biosynthesis may act coordinately and collaboratively to sustain growth and to mediate antifungal resistance in C. glabrata through dynamic gene expression in response to azole stress and environmental challenges.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29532896 PMCID: PMC5928633 DOI: 10.3892/mmr.2018.8716
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Med Rep ISSN: 1791-2997 Impact factor: 2.952
Candida glabrata strains used in this study.
| Strain | Parental strain | Genotype or description | Reference or source |
|---|---|---|---|
| NCCLS84 | Wild-type (ATCC90030)[ | ATCC[ | |
| Cg84u | NCCLS84 | ( | |
| Cg1660 | Clinical isolate | FHCRC[ | |
| Cg1660u | Cg1660 | ( | |
| CgTn201S | Cg1660u | ( | |
| CgTn201Su | CgTn201S | Present study | |
| CgTn201Su/aus1 | CgTn201Su | Present study | |
American Type Culture Collection (ATCC), Manassas, VA, USA.
FHCRC, Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, Seattle, WA, USA.
Primers and TaqMan probes for RT-qPCR analysis of gene expression used in this study.
| Gene | Primer and probe sequence (5′→3′) | Gene number[ |
|---|---|---|
| F | TTGGACTCTGGTGACGGTGTTA | CAGL0K12694g |
| R | AAAATAGCGTGTGGCAAAGAGAA | |
| P | CCACGTTGTTCCAATTTACGCCGG | |
| F | CTTGGTTCTCGCATCGATGA | CAGL0L13387r |
| R | GGCGCAATGTGCGTTCA | |
| P | ACGCAGCGAAATGCGATACGTAATGTG | |
| F | TCCCAGGTATGACCCATCATC | CAGL0L10714g |
| R | TGCGAAGGAGTTTTGATCCAT | |
| P | ACAAAAGGGCTACGCAAAGCAATACGC | |
| F | TGCACTGGCCTCGTGTCTAC | CAGL0F01793g |
| R | TAACCGTCGACTGGGTGGAA | |
| P | TGGTTGGTCTGCACTCCATTCGCC | |
| F | CCCTCAATTAGGTGTCGTCATGT | CAGL0A00429g |
| R | GGCACGATTAATTCTTCACCCTTA | |
| P | CCACTGGCTGTACGCTAACGCTTGTG | |
| F | GCCAGAACCCCAATTGGTT | CAGL0L12364g |
| R | TGCAATGACACCTAGGTCAACAG | |
| P | TTCCAAGGTGCGTTGGCCTCCA | |
| F | TGTCTTGATGGGTGGTCAACA | CAGL0E04334g |
| R | CTGGTCTTTCAGCCAAATGCA | |
| P | CTTCCGCTGCTACCTCCGCTTGG | |
| F | CCTGGAGACGTGAATTTGGAAT | CAGL0J07436g |
| R | ACAGCAACCAAATCCGATGTAA | |
| P | CTCGTCACCATTTTCTTCACCCAAATGG | |
| F | TTGGCCTGGAGACGTGAATT | CAGL0J07436g |
| R | GTTTACCACTTTCATTCTCTACAGCAA | |
| P | TTGGGTGAAGAAAATGGTGACGAGGTTACA | |
| F | CCAAGCCACTGCAGGTGAA | CAGL0F01419g |
| R | GGCGTGAAACAGGGACTTGA | |
| P | CGGTGCCCCAACGTCGGGTATC | |
| F | GTTGATGGCATTACATGGCAAT | CAGL0I04246g |
| R | AGTAAAGGAGTTGGATGATGAGTGAA | |
| P | ACCAATTCCTATCGCCTCCAATGCCA | |
| F | AGGGCCTTCAAGGTATCGAAGT | CAGL0L09383g |
| R | TCGGTTTTTGGATCACACCAA | |
| P | TTGCCTCTCCAAAACAGAAACTACCCTCCC | |
| F | CAATTACAAGAGCATGCAAACATTG | CAGL0C01199g |
| R | GGAGTTAGCCTGACCATGAGTATTATT | |
| P | TGCATCAGAAACAGCATATCCAACGACTGT | |
| F | AAAATAGTACAGGAGCAACGGAGACT | CAGL0C01199g |
| R | TGGTTGCACCTGGAGATGAA | |
| P | CTGTCGCCTTCTCTGAATCTGCTTACACCC | |
| F | GGTCGCAAGTGCATTGTTGT | CAGL0F07865g |
| R | TCAGTCGCATTTGATGTATCTTTAGG | |
| P | CGTGGAATAATCACGATCCTCACATGCA |
Candida Genome Database (www.candidagenome.org). F, forward primer; R, reverse primer; P, TaqMan probe, labeled as 5′-FAM, 3′-TAMRA; RT-qPCR, reverse transcription-quantitative polyermase chain reaction.
Figure 1.Southern hybridization analysis confirms the deletion and targeted gene replacement of CgAUS1 in Candida glabrata. (A) Deletion strategy of CgAUS1 in the strain CgTn201Su (Cgerg1/ura3). The CgAUS1 ORF was replaced with ScURA3 in the mutant CgTn201Su/aus1 (Cgerg1 Cgaus1Δ). (B) The CgERG1 locus in the clinical isolate Cg1660 and its transposon mutant CgTn201S (Cgerg1). (C) Southern blot analysis. The genomic DNAs of Cg1660, CgTn201S, and the mutant CgTn201Su/aus1 were digested with EcoRI, electrophoresed, and blotted onto a nylon membrane. The membrane was hybridized with the 1087-bp CgAUS1 probe (left panel) or 1.2-kb ScURA3 probe (right panel). Lanes (from the left): 1. Cg1660, clinical isolate; 2. CgTn201S, Cgerg1 mutant; 3. and 4. CgTn201Su/aus1, Cgerg1 Cgaus1Δ double mutant. The detected signals for CgAUS1 (left panel) and ScURA3 (right panel) are indicated by arrows.
Upregulated expression of sterol biosynthetic and sterol transporter genes in Candida glabrata under fluconazole stress.
| Gene | mRNA levels |
|---|---|
| 11.79[ | |
| 5.04[ | |
| 11.08[ | |
| 19.07[ | |
| 5.87[ | |
| 3.73[ | |
| 2.51[ | |
| 2.60[ | |
| 0.97 | |
| 4.71[ | |
| 1.60[ |
Values indicate the fold-change in RNA transcription for each gene in 200 µg/ml fluconazole-treated C. glabrata after normalization to RDN5.8 as the reference, as compared with the level in untreated cells, which was set as 1.
P<0.05 or
P<0.01 between fluconazole-treated and untreated C. glabrata cells for all values shown in this table.
Figure 2.Expression of CgAUS1, CgTIR3, and CgUPC2B is up-regulated in Candida glabrata erg1 mutant. DNA microarray was used to analyze gene expression in the C. glabrata erg1 mutant CgTn201S and its parental wild-type strain Cg1660 as described in Materials and methods. Six microarrays were performed for analysis of the Cgerg1 mutant/wild-type pair, including two with reciprocal labeling. The average mRNA expression levels were based on mean of six replicates. Transcriptional profiling of the microarrays revealed the up-regulation (fold-change) of CgAUS1, CgTIR3, and CgUPC2B in CgTn201S (Cgerg1) as compared with Cg1660 (wild-type), which was set as 1. *P<0.01 between the C. glabrata erg1 mutant CgTn201S and its parental wild-type strain Cg1660 using Student's t-test.
Candida glabrata genes up- and down-regulated ≥1.5-fold in response to CgERG1 disruption (Cgerg1 mutation) in Cg1660 host.
| Description | Fold expression[ | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Upregulated genes | |||
| CAGL0F01419g | AUS1 | ATP-binding cassette transporter involved in sterol uptake | 2.5006 |
| CAGL0C03872g | TIR3/YIL011w | Putative GPI-linked cell wall protein involved in sterol uptake | 5.6547 |
| CAGL0F07865g | UPC2B | Transcription factor transcriptionally regulates ergosterol biosynthetic genes and sterol transporter genes | 3.4979 |
| CAGL0L10714g | ERG2 | C-8 sterol isomerase participates in ergosterol biosynthesis | 2.0136 |
| CAGL0F01793g | ERG3 | C-5 sterol desaturase participates in ergosterol biosynthesis | 2.7363 |
| CAGL0M07656g | ERG5 | C-22 sterol desaturase participates in ergosterol biosynthesis | 2.3415 |
| CAGL0H04653g | ERG6 | C-24 sterol methyltransferase participates in ergosterol biosynthesis | 2.1176 |
| CAGL0J10824g | ERG7 | Lanosterol synthase participates in ergosterol biosynthesis | 2.31 |
| CAGL0L12364g | ERG10/POT14 | Acetyl-CoA C-acetyltransferase participates in ergosterol biosynthesis | 2.2113 |
| CAGL0E04334g | ERG11 | Lanosterol 14-a-demethylase involved in ergosterol biosynthesis | 2.8477 |
| CAGL0K03927g | ERG29 | Roles in ergosterol biosynthesis, mitochondrion organization, etc | 1.5044 |
| CAGL0J03916g | HES1/KES1 | Roles in ergosterol biosynthesis, oxysterol binding, sterol transport, etc | 2.9779 |
| CAGL0J00297g | YHR045w | Possible roles in iron, amino acid, and carbohydrate metabolisms | 1.5889 |
| CAGL0A01089g | YPL272c | Alcohol O-acetyltransferase with role in alcohol metabolic process | 4.0299 |
| CAGL0I01408g | CYC1 | Cytochrome- | 2.6164 |
| CAGL0L03828g | CYB5 | Cytochrome b5 involved in oxidation-reduction process | 1.5483 |
| CAGL0K10868g | CTA1 | Catalase A involved in cellular response to oxidative stress | 2.7464 |
| CAGL0K12100g | HEM13 | Coproporphyrinogen III oxidase involved in heme biosynthesis | 2.3296 |
| CAGL0G03905g | ISA1 | Regulation of ROS metabolic process and biotin biosynthetic process | 1.5708 |
| CAGL0H04851g | PPZ1 | Protein phosphatase Z involved in cation homeostasis and cell wall integrity | 1.633 |
| CAGL0L07480g | NRG1/NRG2 | Transcription factor activity, sequence-specific DNA binding activity | 1.613 |
| CAGL0F01485g | TIR4 | Putative GPI-linked cell wall mannoprotein of the Srp1p/Tip1p family | 5.4181 |
| CAGL0H09614g | TIR1 | Putative GPI-linked cell wall protein | 6.3371 |
| CAGL0C00110g | FLO1 | Member of the FLO family of cell wall flocculation proteins | 1.9697 |
| CAGL0M04125g | YNL320w | Roles in cell polarity, endoplasmic reticulum, mitochondrion, etc | 1.5089 |
| CAGL0E00187g | YMR317w | Putative adhesin-like protein; belongs to adhesin cluster IV | 4.3814 |
| CAGL0G04499g | SET4/YJL105w | Ortholog of | 1.9778 |
| CAGL0F08965g | MSC7/YHR039c | Roles in cytosol, endoplasmic reticulum, nucleus localization, etc | 1.6906 |
| CAGL0C00209g | DAN1/YJR151c | Putative adhesin-like cell wall protein; predicted GPI-anchor | 4.6475 |
| CAGL0G10175g | DAN1/YJR151c | Adhesin-like protein; predicted GPI anchor | 4.7887 |
| CAGL0K04279g | SCM4/YGR049w | Ortholog(s) have mitochondrial outer membrane localization | 1.5542 |
| Downregulated genes | |||
| CAGL0H03971g | YCP4/PST2 | Roles in cellular response to oxidative stress, mitochondrion, etc | 1.5484 |
| CAGL0M05995g | PET10 | Roles in lipid metabolism, respiratory growth, and ATP/ADP exchange | 1.5975 |
| CAGL0G05566g | FMP45 | In mitochondria; role in ascospore formation, cellular response to drug, etc | 1.5862 |
| CAGL0L10142g | RSB1/YOR049c | Sphingolipid transporter; involved in fatty acid transport | 2.1631 |
The Candida glabrata erg1 mutant CgTn201S vs. the parental wild-type Cg1660.
Figure 3.Two major functional networks obtained from the 35 differentially expressed genes in Candida glabrata erg1 mutant using Cytoscape software. Each node (filled circle) represents a biological process and the size and color code indicate, respectively, the number of genes mapped and the significance of the terms (lower right inset). The direction of the network is shown by arrow-head of edges; the edge-thickness is based on kappa-score level calculated automatically by ClueGO. The molecular interaction network between the ‘sterol biosynthetic process’ and ‘lipid localization’ in combination with ‘sterol transport’ is shown in the upper right inset.
Functional enrichment with associated genes identified by using Cytoscape and GO database.
| Enriched process | Associated gene | P-value |
|---|---|---|
| Sterol biosynthetic process | <0.0005 | |
| Lipid localization | 0.0005 to 0.005 |
GO, Gene Ontology.
Figure 4.CgAUS1 deletion in Candida glabrata abolishes the effect of sterol supplement on azole susceptibility under hypoxic conditions. Cg1660 (wild-type), CgTn201S (Cgerg1), or CgTn201Su/aus1 (Cgerg1/aus1Δ) were grown on (A) MIN agar medium or (B) YEPG agar medium. Plates were incubated under conditions of low oxygen tension at 37°C for 3 days. The fluconazole and voriconazole susceptibilities of Cg1660, CgTn201S, and CgTn201Su/aus1 were analyzed by E-test. The intercept of the zone of growth inhibition with the paper strip indicates the minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC). The addition of cholesterol or ergosterol is indicated by the position within each of the four groups as follows: upper left corner, MIN or YEPG; upper right corner, MIN or YEPG with ethanol-Tween 80 solvent alone; lower left corner, MIN or YEPG with cholesterol; and lower right corner, MIN or YEPG with ergosterol. The numerical data are shown in Tables VI and VII for MIN agar cultures and YEPG agar cultures, respectively.
Inhibitory effect of azoles in Candida glabrata wild-type, erg1 mutant, and erg1/aus1∆ double mutant on MIN agar medium with sterol supplement under hypoxic condition.
| E-test on MIN agar medium | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Strain[ | Detergent (0.5% EtOH and 0.5% Tween-80) | Cholesterol (20 µg/ml) | Ergosterol (20 µg/ml) | Fluconazole MIC (µg/ml) | Voriconazole MIC (µg/ml) |
| Cg1660 | − | − | − | >256 | 4.0 |
| Cg1660 | + | − | − | >256 | 4.0 |
| Cg1660 | + | + | − | >256 | 12 |
| Cg1660 | + | − | + | >256 | 12 |
| CgTn201S | − | − | − | 0.50 | 0.064 |
| CgTn201S | + | − | − | 0.50 | 0.064 |
| CgTn201S | + | + | − | >256 | >32 |
| CgTn201S | + | − | + | >256 | >32 |
| CgTn201Su/Cgaus1 | − | − | − | 0.50 | 0.064 |
| CgTn201Su/Cgaus1 | + | − | − | 0.50 | 0.064 |
| CgTn201Su/Cgaus1 | + | + | − | 0.50 | 0.064 |
| CgTn201Su/Cgaus1 | + | − | + | 0.50 | 0.064 |
Under hypoxic conditions (1% O2). Cg1660, C. glabrata wild-type; CgTn201S, C. glabrata erg1 mutant; CgTn201S/Cgaus1, C. glabrata erg1/aus1Δ double mutant; EtOH, ethanol; MIC, minimum inhibitory concentration.
Inhibitory effect of azoles in Candida glabrata wild-type, erg1 mutant, and erg1/aus1∆ double mutant on YEPG agar medium with sterol supplement under hypoxic condition.
| E-test on YEPG agar medium | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Strain[ | Detergent (0.5% EtOH and 0.5% Tween-80) | Cholesterol (20 µg/ml) | Ergosterol (20 µg/ml) | Fluconazole MIC (µg/ml) | Voriconazole MIC (µg/ml) |
| Cg1660 | − | − | − | >256 | 1.0 |
| Cg1660 | + | − | − | >256 | 1.0 |
| Cg1660 | + | + | − | >256 | 1.0 |
| Cg1660 | + | − | + | >256 | 6.0 |
| CgTn201S | − | − | − | 1.0 | 0.064 |
| CgTn201S | + | − | − | 1.0 | 0.064 |
| CgTn201S | + | + | − | >256 | >32 |
| CgTn201S | + | − | + | >256 | >32 |
| CgTn201Su/Cgaus1 | − | − | − | 1.0 | 0.064 |
| CgTn201Su/Cgaus1 | + | − | − | 1.0 | 0.064 |
| CgTn201Su/Cgaus1 | + | + | − | 1.0 | 0.064 |
| CgTn201Su/Cgaus1 | + | − | + | 1.0 | 0.064 |
Under hypoxic conditions (1% O2). Cg1660, C. glabrata wild-type; CgTn201S, C. glabrata erg1 mutant; CgTn201S/Cgaus1, C. glabrata erg1/aus1Δ double mutant; EtOH, ethanol; MIC, minimum inhibitory concentration.
Figure 5.A schematic diagram illustrating a hypothetical model for sterol uptake and sterol biosynthesis acting coordinately and collaboratively in mediating azole antifungal resistance in Candida glabrata under azole and hypoxic stress. See ‘Discussion’ for further elaboration.