Abstract

Chlamydospore formation is a characteristic of many fungal species, among them the closely related human-pathogenic dimorphic yeasts Candida albicans and C. dubliniensis. Whereas function and regulation of filamentation are well-studied in these species, the basis of chlamydospore formation is mostly unknown. Here, we investigate the contribution of environmental and genetic factors and identified central proteins involved in species-specific regulation of chlamydosporulation. We show that specific nutrient levels strongly impact chlamydospore initiation, with starvation favoring sporulation and elevated levels of saccharides or peptone inhibiting it. Thresholds for these nutritional effects differ between C. albicans and C. dubliniensis, which explain species-specific chlamydospore formation on certain diagnostic media. A C. albicans nrg1Δ mutant phenocopied C. dubliniensis, putting Nrg1 regulation at the basis of species-specific chlamydospore formation under various conditions. By screening a series of potential chlamydospore regulators, we identified the TOR and cAMP pathways as crucial for sporulation. As rapamycin treatment blocked chlamydosporulation, a low basal Tor1 activity seems to be essential. In addition, TOR effector pathways play an important role, and loss of the NCR (nitrogen catabolite repression) gene regulators Gat1 and Gln3 reduced chlamydospore formation. A severe reduction was seen for a C. albicans gcn4Δ deletion strain, implicating a link between regulation of amino acid biosynthesis and chlamydospore development. On the other hand, deletion of the GTPase gene RAS1 and the adenylyl cyclase gene CYR1 caused a defect in chlamydospore formation that was mostly rescued by cAMP supplementation. Thus, cAMP-signaling is a second major pathway to control chlamydospore production. Finally, we confirmed light exposure to have a repressive effect on chlamydosporulation. However, permanent illumination only reduced, but not abolished chlamydospore production of C. albicans whereas C. dubliniensis sporulation was unaffected. In summary, we describe novel environmental factors which determine chlamydosporulation and propose a first model for the regulatory network of chlamydospore formation by different Candida species.

Highlights

  • Morphological transitions are a defining feature of polymorphic yeasts, including some Candida species which are important pathogens of humans

  • Some impact of nitrogen on chlamydosporulation has been described for C. albicans (Jansons and Nickerson, 1970b; Dujardin et al, 1980b) but no such information is available for C. dubliniensis so far

  • Assays which are based on the species-specific chlamydospore initiation are a widespread diagnostic method to distinguish between C. albicans and C. dubliniensis (Ells et al, 2011)

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Summary

Introduction

Morphological transitions are a defining feature of polymorphic yeasts, including some Candida species which are important pathogens of humans. Current research on Candida morphology focuses mainly on the yeast-to-hypha-transition, a key virulence factor especially of C. albicans (Mayer et al, 2013). In comparison, another morphological structure, the chlamydospores—thickwalled, globular structures formed via suspensor cells on hyphal tips—is often neglected and their biological function remain a mystery. Another morphological structure, the chlamydospores—thickwalled, globular structures formed via suspensor cells on hyphal tips—is often neglected and their biological function remain a mystery They are used as a reliable and cheap diagnostic tool (Campanha et al, 2005), as in addition to certain Candida species, many different fungi like Fusarium, the dermatophytes, or Cryptococcus can form chlamydospores. Within the Candida clade, the close relatives C. albicans and C. dubliniensis are the only known producers of chlamydospores in addition to other morphological forms, such as yeasts, pseudohyphae, and true hyphae (Staib and Morschhäuser, 2007; Moran et al, 2012)

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