Glucose depletion enables Candida albicans mating independently of the epigenetic white-opaque switch

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作者
Guobo Guan
Li Tao
Chao Li
Ming Xu
Ling Liu
Richard J. Bennett
Guanghua Huang
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[1] Fudan University,Department of Infectious Diseases, Shanghai Key Laboratory of Infectious Diseases and Biosafety Emergency Response, National Medical Center for Infectious Diseases, Huashan Hospital, Shanghai Institute of Infectious Disease and Biosecurity
[2] Chinese Academy of Sciences,State Key Laboratory of Mycology, Institute of Microbiology
[3] Brown University,Molecular Microbiology and Immunology Department
[4] Shanghai Engineering Research Center of Industrial Microorganisms,undefined
[5] Shanghai Huashen Institute of Microbes and Infections,undefined
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The human fungal pathogen Candida albicans can switch stochastically and heritably between a “white” phase and an “opaque” phase. Opaque cells are the mating-competent form of the species, whereas white cells are thought to be essentially “sterile”. Here, we report that glucose depletion, a common nutrient stress, enables C. albicans white cells to undergo efficient sexual mating. The relative expression levels of pheromone-sensing and mating-associated genes (including STE2/3, MFA1, MFα1, FIG1, FUS1, and CEK1/2) are increased under glucose depletion conditions, while expression of mating repressors TEC1 and DIG1 is decreased. Cph1 and Tec1, factors that act downstream of the pheromone MAPK pathway, play opposite roles in regulating white cell mating as TEC1 deletion or CPH1 overexpression promotes white cell mating. Moreover, inactivation of the Cph1 repressor Dig1 increases white cell mating ~4000 fold in glucose-depleted medium relative to that in the presence of glucose. Our findings reveal that the white-to-opaque epigenetic switch may not be a prerequisite for sexual mating in C. albicans in nature.
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