Abstract

The proper balance of gene expression is essential for cellular health, organismal development, and maintaining homeostasis. In response to complex internal and external signals, the cell needs to modulate gene expression to maintain proteostasis and establish cellular identity within its niche. On a genome level, single-celled prokaryotic microbes display clustering of co-expressed genes that are regulated as a polycistronic RNA. This phenomenon is largely absent from eukaryotic microbes, although there is extensive clustering of co-expressed genes as functional pairs spread throughout the genome in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. While initial analysis demonstrated conservation of clustering in divergent fungal lineages, a comprehensive analysis has yet to be performed. Here we report on the prevalence, conservation, and significance of the functional clustering of co-regulated genes within the opportunistic human pathogen, Candida albicans. Our analysis reveals that there is extensive clustering within this organism—although the identity of the gene pairs is unique compared with those found in S. cerevisiae—indicating that this genomic arrangement evolved after these microbes diverged evolutionarily, rather than being the result of an ancestral arrangement. We report a clustered arrangement in gene families that participate in diverse molecular functions and are not the result of a divergent orientation with a shared promoter. This arrangement coordinates the transcription of the clustered genes to their neighboring genes, with the clusters congregating to genomic loci that are conducive to transcriptional regulation at a distance.

Highlights

  • Many Candida species are opportunistic pathogens, with cells undergoing profound transcriptional changes during the transition into a pathogenic form

  • We report that the genomic distribution of gene families into clusters is widespread in C. albicans and that this arrangement is extensively conserved within related Candida species

  • The prevalence and statistical probability of genomic arrangement was determined by accessing the membership of each gene family annotated by the gene ontology (GO)

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Summary

Introduction

Many Candida species are opportunistic pathogens, with cells undergoing profound transcriptional changes during the transition into a pathogenic form. These pathogens are a major cause of morbidity and mortality across the world and represent a significant public health threat [1,2]. Candida species can manifest as: candidemia, in the formation of biofilms, urinary tract infections, vulvovaginal infections, thrush, and associated invasive candidiasis [3,4,5,6,7]. Of particular importance is the genomic organization, transcriptional regulation, and regulatory mechanisms associated with the changes in the lifecycle of Candida strains—such as during the switch to infection and pathogenesis [11,12,13,14]

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