Abstract

Mucolares are an ancient group of fungi encompassing the causal agents for the lethal infection mucormycosis. The high lethality rates, the emerging character of this disease, and the broad antifungal resistance of its causal agents are mucormycosis features that are alarming clinicians and researchers. Thus, the research field around mucormycosis is currently focused on finding specific weaknesses and targets in Mucorales for developing new treatments. In this work, we tested the role of the white-collar genes family in the virulence potential of Mucor lusitanicus. Study of the three genes of this family, mcwc-1a, mcwc-1b, and mcwc-1c, resulted in a marked functional specialization, as only mcwc-1a was essential to maintain the virulence potential of M. lusitanicus. The traditional role of wc-1 genes regulating light-dependent responses is a thoroughly studied field, whereas their role in virulence remains uncharacterized. In this work, we investigated the mechanism involving mcwc-1a in virulence from an integrated transcriptomic and functional approach during the host–pathogen interaction. Our results revealed mcwc-1a as a master regulator controlling an extensive gene network. Further dissection of this gene network clustering its components by type of regulation and functional criteria disclosed a multifunctional mechanism depending on diverse pathways. In the absence of phagocytic cells, mcwc-1a controlled pathways related to cell motility and the cytoskeleton that could be associated with the essential tropism during tissue invasion. After phagocytosis, several oxidative response pathways dependent on mcwc-1a were activated during the germination of M. lusitanicus spores inside phagocytic cells, which is the first stage of the infection. The third relevant group of genes involved in virulence and regulated by mcwc-1a belonged to the “unknown function,” indicating that new and hidden pathways are involved in virulence. The unknown function category is especially pertinent in the study of mucormycosis, as it is highly enriched in specific fungal genes that represent the most promising targets for developing new antifungal compounds. These results unveil a complex multifunctional mechanism used by wc-1 genes to regulate the pathogenic potential in Mucorales that could also apply to other fungal pathogens.

Highlights

  • This article is an open access articleMucormycosis is a threatening infection caused by Mucorales that is the most unexplored host–pathogen interaction [1]

  • We analyzed the role of the three mcwc-1 genes during host interactions and showed thatWe mcwc-1a is involved in the thethree virulence potential of M. lusitanicus

  • Previous analyzed the role of mcwc-1 genes during host interactions andworks showed demonstrated the role in virulence of wc-1 genes in different fungi of Basidiomycota that mcwc-1a is involved in the virulence potential of M. lusitanicus

Read more

Summary

Introduction

This article is an open access articleMucormycosis is a threatening infection caused by Mucorales that is the most unexplored host–pathogen interaction [1]. The recent interest in mucormycosis relies on the three main features of this infection: high mortality rates, its emerging character, and its unusual antifungal resistance. The direct cause of the high mortality rates is the lack of effective antifungal compounds against mucormycosis [2]. The high mortality rates, the increasing incidence, and the recent antifungal resistances found in Mucorales reveal the necessity of new and more effective treatments [5]. In this context, most of the current research is based on searching for and characterizing new targets in the physiology of Mucorales that could serve for the development of new antifungal compounds. This work aims to study the role of the white collar-1 (wc-1) genes in the virulence of Mucorales as master regulators controlling many pathways that could represent new promising targets

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call