Abstract

The rise of drug resistance in fungal pathogens is becoming a serious problem owing to the limited number of antifungal drugs available. Identifying and targeting factors essential for virulence or development unique to fungal pathogens is one approach to develop novel treatments for fungal infections. In this study, we present the identification and functional characterization of a novel developmental regulator in Aspergillus fumigatus, AfMed15, which contained a conserved Med15_fungal domain, as determined by screening of a mutant library that contained more than 2,000 hygromycin-resistant A. fumigatus transformants. Downregulating the expression of Afmed15 abolished the conidiation and decreased the fungal virulence in an insect model. Strikingly, the overexpression of Afmed15 caused fungal death accompanied by intensive autophagy. RNA sequencing of an Afmed15 overexpression strain revealed that altered gene expression patterns were associated with carbon metabolism, energy metabolism, and translation. Interestingly, the addition of metal ions could partially rescue fungal death caused by the overexpression of Afmed15, indicating that disordered ion homeostasis is a potential reason for the fungal death caused by the overexpression of Afmed15 Considering that the precise expression of Afmed15 is crucial for fungal development, virulence, and survival and that no ortholog was found in humans, Afmed15 is an ideal target for antifungal-drug development.IMPORTANCE The identification and characterization of regulators essential for virulence or development constitute one approach for antifungal drug development. In this study, we screened and functionally characterized Afmed15, a novel developmental regulator in A. fumigatus We demonstrate that the precise transcriptional expression of Afmed15 is crucial for fungal asexual development, virulence, and survival. Downregulating the expression of Afmed15 abolished the conidiation and decreased the fungal virulence in an insect model. In contrast, the overexpression of Afmed15 caused fungal death accompanied by intensive autophagy. Our study provides a foundation for further studies to identify compounds perturbing the expression of Afmed15 that may be used for the prevention of invasive A. fumigatus infections.

Highlights

  • The rise of drug resistance in fungal pathogens is becoming a serious problem owing to the limited number of antifungal drugs available

  • More recently, it was proven that the dysregulation of the conidiation pathway via the overexpression of brlA reduced the vegetative growth of A. fumigatus in vitro and virulence in vivo [14]

  • Since the deletion of Afmed15 abolished conidiation, we examined if Afmed15 regulates the expression of the brlA, abaA, and wetA pathway genes, which had been verified as central regulators of asexual development in Aspergillus

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Summary

Introduction

The rise of drug resistance in fungal pathogens is becoming a serious problem owing to the limited number of antifungal drugs available. Identifying and targeting factors essential for virulence or development unique to fungal pathogens is one approach to develop novel treatments for fungal infections. Considering that the precise expression of Afmed is crucial for fungal development, virulence, and survival and that no ortholog was found in humans, Afmed is an ideal target for antifungal-drug development. IMPORTANCE The identification and characterization of regulators essential for virulence or development constitute one approach for antifungal drug development. Identifying and targeting factors essential for virulence or development that are unique to fungal pathogens constitute one approach for the development of novel treatments for fungal infections. A better understanding of the genetic regulatory mechanisms of fungal development will illuminate new approaches to control fungal disease

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