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Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, September 2005, p. 3646-3651, Vol. 49, No. 9
0066-4804/05/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/AAC.49.9.3646-3651.2005
Copyright © 2005, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
5,6-Desaturase Attenuates Virulence in Candida albicans
Schering Plough Research Institute, 2015 Galloping Hill Road, K15-4-4700, Kenilworth, New Jersey 07033,1 Department of Microbiology-Infectious Diseases, Hospital Maisonneuve-Rosemont, Montreal, Quebec, Canada2
Received 12 April 2005/ Returned for modification 11 May 2005/ Accepted 26 May 2005
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5,6-desaturase, involved in ergosterol synthesis. Extraction and analysis of the sterols from both isolates confirmed the absence of sterol
5,6-desaturase activity. Although the loss of sterol
5,6-desaturase activity is known to confer resistance to azoles, this mechanism of resistance has rarely been seen in clinical isolates, suggesting that such mutants are at a competitive disadvantage. To test this hypothesis, the virulence of the erg3 mutants was assayed by using a mouse systemic infection model. The mutants were significantly less virulent than the wild-type comparator strains. However, the kidney fungal burdens in mice infected with the erg3 mutants were similar to those in mice infected with the wild-type strains. Similar results were obtained by using a laboratory-generated homozygous erg3 deletion mutant (D. Sanglard et al., Antimicrob. Agents Chemother. 47:2404-2412, 2003). Reintroduction of a wild-type ERG3 allele into the homozygous deletion mutant restored virulence, ergosterol synthesis, and susceptibility to azoles, confirming that these phenotypic changes were solely due to the inactivation of Erg3p. |
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-demethylase (CYP51), the echinocandins disrupt cell wall synthesis through inhibition of ß-glucan synthesis, and the polyenes bind to ergosterol and disrupt the fungal cell membrane (14).
Resistance to antifungal drugs and, in particular, the azoles has been the subject of numerous studies (for a review, see reference 17). In Candida the most prevalent mechanisms of azole resistance appear to be decreased intracellular drug accumulation, which results from increased expression of efflux pump genes, and mutations in the drug target CYP51 (encoded by ERG11), which are proposed to impair drug binding. A third, less frequently observed mechanism involves inactivation of the sterol
5,6-desaturase (encoded by ERG3), a nonessential enzyme involved in the late stages of ergosterol synthesis (Fig. 1). Ordinarily, exposure of C. albicans to azoles results in the accumulation of 14
-methylfecosterol, which is subsequently converted by the sterol
5,6-desaturase to 14
-methylergosta-8,24 (28)dien-3ß,6
-diol (14
-methyl-3,6-diol). Since 14
-methylfecosterol is capable of supporting fungal growth and 14
-methyl-3,6-diol is toxic to the cell, inactivation of the sterol
5,6-desaturase renders the cells resistant to azoles (6).
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FIG. 1. Schematic representation of a part of the ergosterol synthesis pathway highlighting the role of the 5,6-desaturase in conferring reduced susceptibility to azoles.
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::hisG/erg3
::hisG-URA3-hisG erg11
::hisG/ERG11), a homozygous erg3 deletion mutant, and its progenitor, DSY1336 (erg3
::hisG-URA3-hisG/ERG3 erg11
::hisG/ERG11), were provided by Dominique Sanglard (18). ASC99 is a ura3 derivative of DSY1751 that was generated by plating DSY1751 on yeast extract-peptone-dextrose (YPD; QBiogene, Carlsbad, CA) agar supplemented with 0.01% (wt/vol) 5-fluoorotic acid and 10 mM uridine (Sigma Chemical Co., St. Louis, MO) to select for cells that had lost URA3 through genetic recombination between the hisG repeats. Strains were routinely cultured in either Sabouraud dextrose (QBiogene) or YPD broth. The identities of the clinical isolates were confirmed by using the Vitek identification system with the Yeast Biochemical Card (bioMérieux Vitek Inc., Hazelwood, MO). Antifungal agents and susceptibility testing. Posaconazole was prepared at SPRI as a micronized powder. Itraconazole and amphotericin B powders were obtained from Janssen Pharmaceutica Inc. (Beerse, Belgium) and Sigma Chemical Co., respectively. Voriconazole and fluconazole were obtained from Pfizer Inc. (New York, N.Y.). All drugs except voriconazole were dissolved in dimethyl sulfoxide; voriconazole was dissolved in water. Broth microdilution MIC testing in RPMI 1640 medium (BioWhittaker, Walkersville, MD) was performed as described in the CSLI (formerly the National Committee for Clinical Laboratory Standards) document M27-A2, Reference Method for Broth Dilution Susceptibility Testing of Yeasts (12). Agar-based MIC testing was performed by using Etest strips (AB Biodisk, Solna, Sweden) on RPMI 1640 agar plates supplemented with 2% glucose, as directed by the manufacturer.
DNA-typing techniques for strain identification. Repetitive element PCR was performed by using a DiversiLab Candida kit, and the PCR was run on a Caliper 1000 analyzer, as described by the manufacturer (Bacterial BarCodes, Houston, TX). The resultant data were analyzed with DiversiLab System software.
Sterol identification. Test strains were labeled with [14C]acetate, and nonsaponifiable lipids were extracted and resolved by high-pressure liquid chromatography as described previously (11). Sterol identity was confirmed by gas chromatography-mass spectroscopy (GC-MS).
DNA sequencing and quantitation of gene expression levels. The ERG3- and ERG11-coding regions were amplified by PCR from purified chromosomal DNA as overlapping 500-bp fragments and were sequenced by GeneWiz, Inc. (North Brunswick, NJ). The sequences were compared to the following GenBank sequences: the ERG3 sequence with accession number AF069752 and the ERG11 sequence with accession number X13296. Gene expression levels were measured by a real-time quantitative multiplex PCR, as described previously (1).
Germ tube formation. Cells were grown overnight in YPD at 30°C with shaking. Germ tube formation was induced by subculturing the cells into fresh YPD supplemented with 10% (vol/vol) serum (Serum Supreme; Biowhittaker) and incubating the cells at 37°C without shaking. Control cultures were grown at 30°C without serum or shaking.
Reversion of
erg3 in C. albicans strain DSY1751.
A linear PCR product that comprised the URA3 marker flanked on the 5' side by the intact ERG3 gene and on the 3' side by the sequences normally found downstream of ERG3 was generated as follows. Chromosomal DNA extracted from C. albicans C43 was used as the template for the PCRs. The open reading frames for ERG3 (5'-AGCATCCCTCTAATCTAAGAAATACTTTGT-3' and 5'-CAGCTCTTTTTTTTGTTTCCGTTTATACCATCCAATCATTGTTCAACATATTCTCTA-3') and URA3 (5'-GTTGACGATAGAGAATATGTTGAACAATGATTGGATGGTATAAACGGAAACA-3' and 5'-AGTCAATGGTCCAAAACAAAGATGTACCAATCTAGAAGGACCACCTTTGATTG-3'), plus the region downstream of ERG3 (5'-CTATTTACAATCAAAGGTGGTCCTTCTAGATTGGTACATCTTTGTTTTGGACCA-3' and 5'-TCTACTTCTAAACAAACTGAAATGGCTAACACT-3'), were amplified by PCR with the indicated primers. The primers were designed to provide 20 bp of overlapping homology between each fragment; subsequently, all three fragments were fused together in a single PCR by using flanking primers (5'-AGACTACGCGAGACCACACTTGCAT-3' and 5'-AAGAAAGAAAGGTGTATTTAAAGTTCGATT-3'). The 3.97-kb product was used to transform ASC99 to prototrophy by using the Frozen-EZ Yeast Transformation II kit (Zymo Research, Orange, CA).
Mouse virulence models. The virulence of the C. albicans strains was assayed by injecting 5 x 106 CFU into the tail vein of groups of 10 male CR-CF1 mice; survival was monitored for 10 days. For measurement of both survival and kidney fungal burdens, groups of 20 mice were inoculated as described above and then randomly assorted into two groups; one group was monitored for survival. Half the mice from the second group were euthanized after 24 h, and the kidney fungal burdens were determined by plating serial dilutions of homogenized tissue. Samples from the remaining five mice were cultured as they died; the survivors were euthanized on day 10 and samples were cultured. Differences in survival were analyzed for statistical significance by using the log-rank test.
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Susceptibility profiles of the clinical C. albicans isolates. Strains C410 and C655 exhibited significant reductions in susceptibility to azoles and a modest reduction in susceptibility to amphotericin B (Table 1). Strains C673 and C43 (strain C43 is a clinical isolate from the SPRI culture collection and was included for comparative purposes) were susceptible to all drugs tested. DNA fingerprinting confirmed that the isolates from the patient who had received a hematopoietic stem cell transplant (C410 and C673) were closely related to each other but distinct from C43 and C655 (data not shown).
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TABLE 1. Antifungal susceptibilities of C. albicans isolates
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Sterol analysis confirms the absence of sterol
5,6-desaturase activity in the erg3 mutants.
The predominant sterol extracted from 24-h cultures of azole-susceptible strains C43 and C673 was ergosterol (data not shown). The major sterol extracted from the erg3 mutants (C410 and C655) eluted approximately 1 min earlier than ergosterol. This was confirmed by coinjecting the sterols isolated from C673 and C410; there was a clear separation of the two sterols (Fig. 2). GC-MS analysis confirmed that the sterol extracted from both erg3 mutants was ergosta-7,22-dien-3-ol, an ergosterol precursor that retains a saturated bond between C-5 and C-6. Consistent with the loss of
5,6-desaturase activity, exposure of strain C655 to sub-MICs of posaconazole resulted in the accumulation of 14-methylfecosterol, as well as smaller amounts of eburicol, obtusifoliol, and lanosterol (data not shown).
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FIG. 2. High-pressure liquid chromatography chromatogram of the sterols extracted from C. albicans strains C673 (wild type) and C410 (homozygous erg3 mutant) run on the same column; the major peaks were identified by GC-MS as ergosterol and ergosta-7,22-dien-3-ol, respectively.
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FIG.3. Impact of nonsense mutations in ERG3 on the virulence of C. albicans. Azole-resistant clinical isolates C410 and C655 (both isolates harbored homozygous nonsense mutations in ERG3) and azole-susceptible isolates C43 and C673 were tested in a murine systemic infection model. For all strains, 5 x 106 CFU was injected into the tail vein. Statistical differences in virulence, as measured by survival, are shown under each Kaplan-Meier plot (A and B). A laboratory-generated homozygous erg3 deletion mutant (DSY1751) along with its heterozygous progenitor (DSY1366) and an engineered revertant (ASC100) were similarly tested (C).
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5,6-desaturase activity a wild-type ERG3 gene was reintroduced into a ura3 derivative of DSY1751, ASC99 (see the Materials and Methods section for a description of ASC99). The resultant strain, ASC100, was susceptible to azoles (Table 1), synthesized ergosterol (data not shown), and was significantly more virulent than the homozygous erg3 mutant (Fig. 3C).
Reduced virulence is not accompanied by a reduction in kidney fungal burdens.
To determine if the observed reduction in virulence reflected an inability of the erg3 mutants to exit the bloodstream and enter tissues, we examined the kidney fungal burdens 24 h after infection. There were no significant differences (P
0.05) in the number of cells recovered from the kidneys of mice infected with either wild-type or the mutant strains (Table 2). The fungal burdens in mice infected with an erg3 mutant were also measured at day 10 to determine if cell numbers changed over time. At day 10 there appeared to be a 10-fold increase in the number of colonies recovered; however, the increase was not statistically significant (P = 0.051).
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TABLE 2. Kidney fungal burdens in mice 24 h after infection with C. albicans isolates
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FIG. 4. Impact of nonsense mutations in ERG3 on the ability of C. albicans to transition to the hyphal form. Strains C673 (wild type) and C410 (homozygous erg3 mutant) were subcultured into medium supplemented with serum and incubated at 37°C. At the indicated time points, they were examined microscopically for filament formation.
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5,6-desaturase activity.
Previously, it was found that C. albicans strains that were unable to transition from the yeast to the hyphal form exhibited reduced virulence in mice (19). Interestingly, despite their lack of virulence, the strains were able to leave the blood vessels and establish infections in organs. Both the clinical and the laboratory-generated erg3 mutants described above exhibited a similar phenotype: they were impaired in their ability to form hyphae in the presence of serum in vitro, and they exhibited reduced virulence in mice. Yet, there were no significant differences in the kidney fungal burdens in mice infected with wild-type and mutant strains. The molecular basis for these observations remains to be determined. Previously, azoles (including posaconazole; data not shown) were shown to inhibit hyphal formation (4). A subsequent study suggested that by blocking ergosterol synthesis, the azoles inhibited the formation of ergosterol-rich "rafts" that are associated with the leading edge of the developing hyphae (9). It is conceivable that the loss of sterol
5,6-desaturase activity and, as a consequence, the replacement of ergosterol by ergosta-7,22-dien-3-ol also affect raft formation. However, it should be noted that inhibition of hyphal formation was not caused by the accumulation of ergosta-7,22-dien-3-ol per se. Exposure of the erg3 mutants to azoles, which, as described above, results in the synthesis of 14-methylfecosterol rather than ergosta-7,22-dien-3-ol, did not restore the ability of the mutants to grow as hyphae (data not shown). Alternatively, the change in sterol composition may negatively affect one (or more) of the membrane-localized components of the signal transduction pathway(s) that regulate the change in cell morphology. Prior work highlighted the sensitivity of membrane-localized proteins to changes in membrane composition (10); for example, treatment of C. albicans with azoles resulted in uncoordinated activation of chitin synthase (20). The recent construction of C. albicans strains that are able to grow as filaments in the absence of serum (19), presumably bypassing the signal transduction pathway(s), may allow testing of this hypothesis.
In summary, we have shown that although nonsense mutations in ERG3 confer high-level resistance to azoles and a moderate decrease in susceptibility to AMB, they also attenuate virulence in C. albicans. The loss of virulence most likely appears to be a consequence of the erg3 mutant's inability to form hyphae and may go some way to explaining why such mutants are rarely recovered from patients.
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-demethylase (Erg11p, Cyp51p) to azole resistance in Candida albicans. Microbiology 145:2701-2713.
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-demethylase (CYP51A1) from azole-resistant Candida albicans clinical isolates contribute to resistance to azole antifungal agents. Antimicrob. Agents Chemother. 42:241-253.
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