Abstract
Efficient adaptation to iron starvation is an essential virulence determinant of the most common human mold pathogen, Aspergillus fumigatus. Here, we demonstrate that the cytosolic monothiol glutaredoxin GrxD plays an essential role in iron sensing in this fungus. Our studies revealed that (i) GrxD is essential for growth; (ii) expression of the encoding gene, grxD, is repressed by the transcription factor SreA in iron replete conditions and upregulated during iron starvation; (iii) during iron starvation but not iron sufficiency, GrxD displays predominant nuclear localization; (iv) downregulation of grxD expression results in de-repression of genes involved in iron-dependent pathways and repression of genes involved in iron acquisition during iron starvation, but did not significantly affect these genes during iron sufficiency; (v) GrxD displays protein-protein interaction with components of the cytosolic iron-sulfur cluster biosynthetic machinery, indicating a role in this process, and with the transcription factors SreA and HapX, which mediate iron regulation of iron acquisition and iron-dependent pathways; (vi) UV-Vis spectra of recombinant HapX or the complex of HapX and GrxD indicate coordination of iron-sulfur clusters; (vii) the cysteine required for iron-sulfur cluster coordination in GrxD is in vitro dispensable for interaction with HapX; and (viii) there is a GrxD-independent mechanism for sensing iron sufficiency by HapX; (ix) inactivation of SreA suppresses the lethal effect caused by GrxD inactivation. Taken together, this study demonstrates that GrxD is crucial for iron homeostasis in A. fumigatus.
Highlights
Iron is an essential trace element for almost all organisms in all kingdoms of life
This article is based upon work from COST Action 15133: ‘The Biogenesis of Iron-sulfur Proteins: from Cellular Biology to Molecular Aspects’ (FeSBioNet; www.cost.eu/actions/ CA15133), supported by COST (European Cooperation in Science and Technology)
GrxD is essential for sensing iron starvation in Aspergillus fumigatus nuclei, which was proven by Southern blot analysis (Fig 2A)
Summary
HapX is essential for adaptation to iron excess. HapX changes its function from a repressor to an activator of iron-consuming and detoxifying pathways to avoid iron toxicity. HapX is crucial for adaptation to both iron starvation (-Fe) and high iron concentrations (hFe), i.e. lack of this regulator causes growth defects under -Fe as well as hFe [3]. Both the -Fe and hFe functions of HapX require the HapB/HapC/HapE CCAAT-binding complex (CBC) as a DNA binding platform [4]
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