Abstract

Aspergillus fumigatus is a saprophyte fungus that typically grows on organic decaying matter but can also parasitize immunosuppressed hosts. This is explained, in part, by its great ability to take up Zn2+ ions from living tissues, which is induced by the ZafA transcription factor. This study shows that the ZafA-mediated regulation of fungal growth is also influenced by iron availability and that A. fumigatus is well adapted to grow in zinc-limiting and zinc-replete media with Zn:Fe ratios lower in the former than in the latter. Accordingly, this indicates that iron availability appears to be more critical for fungal growth in zinc-replete than in zinc-limiting environments. Interestingly, the cross-regulation of zinc/iron homeostasis under zinc-replete conditions relies on an unprecedented iron-mediated regulation of different zafA transcription units that, along with a limited transcript translation, allows synthesizing the right basal amount of ZafA dependent on iron availability. We posit that this regulatory strategy has evolved in fungi as a mechanism to adjust zinc intake to iron availability under zinc-replete conditions. Thus, fungal growth is enhanced in zinc- and iron-replete media but restricted by reducing zinc intake under iron starvation to prevent the noxious side effects of an intracellular zinc excess during iron deficiency.

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