Abstract

Target-based azole resistance in Candida albicans involves overexpression of the ERG11 gene encoding lanosterol 14α-demethylase (LDM), and/or the presence of single or multiple mutations in this enzyme. Overexpression of Candida albicans LDM (CaLDM) Y132H I471T by the Darlington strain strongly increased resistance to the short-tailed azoles fluconazole and voriconazole, and weakly increased resistance to the longer-tailed azoles VT-1161, itraconazole and posaconazole. We have used, as surrogates, structurally aligned mutations in recombinant hexahistidine-tagged full-length Saccharomyces cerevisiae LDM6×His (ScLDM6×His) to elucidate how differential susceptibility to azole drugs is conferred by LDM of the C. albicans Darlington strain. The mutations Y140H and I471T were introduced, either alone or in combination, into ScLDM6×His via overexpression of the recombinant enzyme from the PDR5 locus of an azole hypersensitive strain of S. cerevisiae. Phenotypes and high-resolution X-ray crystal structures were determined for the surrogate enzymes in complex with representative short-tailed (voriconazole) and long-tailed (itraconazole) triazoles. The preferential high-level resistance to short-tailed azoles conferred by the ScLDM Y140H I471T mutant required both mutations, despite the I471T mutation conferring only a slight increase in resistance. Crystal structures did not detect changes in the position/tilt of the heme co-factor of wild-type ScLDM, I471T and Y140H single mutants, or the Y140H I471T double-mutant. The mutant threonine sidechain in the Darlington strain CaLDM perturbs the environment of the neighboring C-helix, affects the electronic environment of the heme, and may, via differences in closure of the neck of the substrate entry channel, increase preferential competition between lanosterol and short-tailed azole drugs.

Highlights

  • Mortality rates of 30–95% for invasive fungal infections result in almost 1.5 million deaths per annum [1]

  • AD2∆ is hypersensitive to xenobiotics due to the deletion of seven major ABC transporters, including those responsible for the efflux of azole drugs [48]

  • It is deleted of the PDR3 transcriptional regulator, but contains the gain-of-function Pdr1-3 transcriptional regulator mutation that leads to constitutive overexpression from the PDR5 locus

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Summary

Introduction

Superficial fungal infections affect approximately a billion people worldwide, and are usually readily treated. Mortality rates of 30–95% for invasive fungal infections result in almost 1.5 million deaths per annum [1]. Candida albicans is estimated to be responsible for approximately 40,000 of these deaths, with resistance to antifungal drugs becoming increasingly problematic. Fungal phytopathogens can compromise food security by reducing the yields of major crops such as wheat, rice, and soybeans, spoiling fruit such as bananas, apples, and grapes, and due to carcinogenic mycotoxins contaminating crops such as peanuts [2,3]. Human population growth and climate change require that food is produced efficiently, with the ravages caused by phytopathogens minimized. The identification of effective antifungals that are not subject to drug resistance is needed urgently by both medicine and agriculture

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