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Journal of Bacteriology, September 1999, p. 5273-5279, Vol. 181, No. 17
0021-9193/99/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1999, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
HWP1 Functions in the Morphological
Development of Candida albicans Downstream of
EFG1, TUP1, and RBF1
Laura L.
Sharkey,1
Mark D.
McNemar,1
Susan
M.
Saporito-Irwin,2
Paul S.
Sypherd,2 and
William
A.
Fonzi1,*
Department of Microbiology and Immunology,
Georgetown University, Washington, D.C. 20007,1
and Department of Molecular and Cellular Biology, University of
Arizona, Tucson, Arizona 857212
Received 3 May 1999/Accepted 16 June 1999
 |
ABSTRACT |
The morphological plasticity of Candida albicans is an
important determinant of pathogenicity, and nonfilamentous mutants are
avirulent. HWP1, a hypha-specific gene, was identified in a
genetic screen for developmentally regulated genes and encodes a cell
surface protein of unknown function. Heterozygous and homozygous deletions of HWP1 resulted in a medium-conditional defect
in hyphal development. HWP1 expression was blocked in a
efg1 mutant, reduced in an
rbf1 mutant,
and derepressed in a
tup1 mutant. Therefore, HWP1 functions downstream of the developmental regulators
EFG1, TUP1, and RBF1. Mutation of
CPH1 had no effect on HWP1 expression, suggesting that the positive regulators of hyphal development, CPH1 and EFG1, are components of separate
pathways with different target genes. The expression of a second
developmentally regulated gene, ECE1, was similarly
regulated by EFG1. Since ECE1 is not required
for hyphal development, the regulatory role of EFG1
apparently extends beyond the control of cell shape determinants.
However, expression of ECE1 was not influenced by
TUP1, suggesting that there may be some specificity in the
regulation of morphogenic elements during hyphal development.
 |
INTRODUCTION |
Candida albicans is a
significant opportunistic fungal pathogen and causes superficial
mucosal disease as well as life-threatening systemic infections in
immunocompromised patients. C. albicans is described as a
dimorphic fungus that can grow as a budding yeast or a true hyphal form
but can also adopt a range of intermediate pseudohyphal morphologies.
C. albicans strains defective in the ability to form hyphae
are avirulent in a mouse model of systemic infection (22).
Thus, hyphal development is essential to pathogenicity, but its precise
role in this process is as yet undefined.
Hyphal development is under both positive and negative control.
TUP1 is a general transcriptional repressor in
Saccharomyces cerevisiae (40). Deletion of the
C. albicans homolog of TUP1 results in a
constitutive pseudohyphal phenotype under all growth conditions,
suggesting that TUP1 is responsible for maintenance of the
yeast morphology through repression of genes required for filamentous
growth (6). RBF1 (for "RPG binding factor 1")
encodes a putative transcription factor of C. albicans that
binds to the same consensus sequence as the S. cerevisiae
transcription factor encoded by RAP1 (14).
Mutation of RBF1 results in a stimulation of filamentous
growth, suggesting that RBF1 also plays a negative regulatory role in the yeast-to-hyphal-form transition (15).
Positive control of hyphal development is effected in part by
EFG1, which encodes a basic helix-loop-helix-type
transcription factor (36). Reduced expression or deletion of
EFG1 results in rod-like, elongated cells under the
conditions tested and in the inability to form true hyphae (22,
36). Overexpression results in enhanced pseudohyphal growth
(36). Additional positive control is signaled via a
mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase cascade analogous to that which
controls pseudohyphal development in S. cerevisiae (21,
28). Mutation in the kinase components encoded by
HST7, CST20, or CEK1, or the terminal
transcription factor encoded by CPH1, results in a
medium-conditional defect in hyphal development (8, 17, 18,
20). Conversely, mutation of the MAP kinase phosphatase
CPP1 results in a hyperhyphal phenotype (7). This
kinase cascade cooperatively controls hyphal development in conjunction
with EFG1. Mutation of either EFG1 or
CPH1 alone partially compromises filamentation, while a
cph1/cph1 efg1/efg1 double mutant is restricted entirely to
the yeast growth form under standard growth conditions (22).
The molecular interactions between these various regulators leads to
the coordinate control of hyphal development, but these interactions
remain incompletely defined since no downstream target genes have been
identified. Three developmentally expressed genes, ECE1,
HYR1, and HWP1, have been reported, but neither
ECE1 nor HYR1 is required for hyphal
morphogenesis (2, 5, 35). Here we report the morphogenic
role of HWP1. Expression of HWP1 is dependent
upon EFG1 but does not require CPH1. TUP1
represses its expression, while RBF1 appears to act as an
inducer. Examination of ECE1 expression demonstrated that
this nonmorphogenic function is similarly regulated by EFG1
but is not affected by TUP1. These results suggest that
EFG1 and CPH1 function within largely independent control pathways and regulate distinct sets of morphology-related functions. In addition, the regulatory function of EFG1
extends beyond the control of cell shape.
 |
MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Strains and growth conditions.
The strains used in this
study are listed in Table 1. They were
routinely cultured on YPD medium (33) or YNB medium (2% glucose, 0.17% Difco yeast nitrogen base without amino acids or ammonium sulfate, 0.5% ammonium sulfate) at 30°C. Medium 199 (Gibco BRL, Gaithersburg, Md.) containing Earle's salts and glutamine but
lacking sodium bicarbonate was buffered with 150 mM Tris (pH 7). Spider
medium was prepared as described previously (20). The medium
of Lee et al. was prepared as described previously (19).
N-Acetylglucosamine induction medium was prepared as
described by Shepherd et al. (32). Media were solidified
with 1.5% agar and supplemented with 25 µg of uridine per ml for
growth of Urd3
strains. Germ tube induction was assessed
at 37°C following inoculation of stationary-phase cells into
prewarmed medium at a density of 5 × 106 cells/ml.
Negative controls were incubated at 25°C. Filamentation on
agar-solidified media was assessed by diluting stationary-phase cells
to 2 × 108 cells/ml in water, spotting 1 × 106 cells (5 µl) onto the plate, and incubating them at
37°C. Invasive hyphal growth was assessed after washing the agar
plates with sterile water to remove surface growth (28).
Gene isolation.
cDNA clones of hypha-expressed genes and
their corresponding genomic clones were isolated as previously
described (5). A 4.3-kb EcoRI genomic fragment
corresponding to cDNA 8 was subcloned from plasmid pSMS22 into pUC18.
The gene was tentatively called ECE2.
DNA sequence analysis.
Nucleotide sequences were determined
by the dideoxy chain termination method with Sequenase 2.0 T7 DNA
polymerase (United States Biochemical, Cleveland, Ohio). Reactions were
primed with the T3 and T7 primers and custom-designed oligonucleotide
primers. Sequence analysis was performed with DNA Strider
(23). Homology searches were conducted with the BLAST
algorithm (1) and SCAN (26). Sequence alignments
were performed with MACAW (31) and ClustalW 1.6 (13).
Construction of mutant strains.
The insert from plasmid
pSMS22 was subcloned into the EcoRI site of a
pBSK+ (Stratagene, La Jolla, Calif.) derivative in which
the BamHI site had been destroyed by filling in with Klenow
DNA polymerase. The resulting plasmid, pELS-1, contained a unique
BamHI site within HWP1. A 434-bp
BglII-BamHI fragment in the 5' coding region was deleted and replaced with the 3.8-kb
HindIII-BglII hisG-URA3-hisG fragment from plasmid pMB7 (10), generating plasmid pELS-2. The BamHI and HindIII ends were blunt-end
ligated following a filling-in reaction. pELS-2 was digested with
SmaI and HindIII, releasing a 5.4-kb fragment
containing the hisG-URA3-hisG fragment flanked by
HWP1 sequences. This DNA was used for the sequential disruption of both HWP1 alleles in strain CAI4 by previously
published methods (10).
To reintroduce a functional copy of
HWP1, plasmid pELS-1 was
digested with
PshAI and
XhoI, filled in, and
ligated to create
plasmid pELS-5. This removed a 2.0-kb fragment of
3'-flanking
sequence containing two
HindIII restriction
sites. A 1.4-kb
XbaI-
PstI
fragment containing
URA3 (
30) was added to create pELS-6. pELS-6
was
linearized at the unique
HindIII site located 3' of the
BamHI
site within
HWP1 to target integration to
the
HWP1 locus.
Constitutive expression of
HWP1 was effected with the
TEF2 promoter (
37). A
ClaI site was
introduced 5 bp upstream of the
HWP1 open reading frame in
plasmid pELS-5 by QuikChange mutagenesis
(Stratagene). The
HWP1 promoter was removed by
EcoRI-
ClaI digestion
and replaced with the
0.75-kb
EcoRI-
ClaI fragment of the
TEF2 promoter from plasmid pEF1-Fow (
30). The
XbaI-
PstI fragment
of
URA3 was added,
resulting in plasmid pELS-10. Plasmid DNA was
digested with
BspEI prior to transformation to target integration
to the
HWP1 locus. The integration events in all the
transformations
were verified by Southern blot
analysis.
Southern and Northern blot analyses.
Southern and Northern
blotting were conducted as described previously (25). Blots
were hybridized with the HWP1 4.3-kb EcoRI insert
from plasmid pSMS22, the 1.6-kb BamHI-EcoRV
ECE1 fragment from plasmid pCAN4, or ACT1 DNA as
a control. Northern blots were quantitated with a Molecular Dynamics
445SI PhosphorImager and associated software.
Nucleotide sequence accession number.
The sequence of
ECE2 was entered into GenBank under accession no. AF001978.
 |
RESULTS |
Isolation and identification of HWP1.
Hyphal development
is presumably effected by differential expression of morphogenic
functions in response to external signals. Previously, we isolated
several cDNA clones of genes differentially expressed during the
yeast-to-hyphal-form transition (5). One of these clones,
cDNA 8, hybridized to a 2.4-kb mRNA expressed only in pseudohyphae and
hyphae (Fig. 1). The expression pattern was similar to that previously described for ECE1
(5); thus, the gene was tentatively designated
ECE2. Expression was independent of the medium used to
induce filamentation, and the expression pattern in the
medium-conditional strain SGY243 (16) demonstrated that
expression was morphology specific rather than being a response to the
inducing environment.

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FIG. 1.
Differential expression of cDNA 8. RNA was isolated from
strain SC5314 grown in medium 199 at the indicated pH and temperature.
A Northern blot of the sample was hybridized with cDNA 8 (HWP1) or
ACT1.
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|
Sequence analysis of the genomic clone identified an open reading frame
of 1,902 bp encoding a 634-residue protein with four
distinct repeat
domains (Fig.
2). The amino terminus
contained
a potential 27-residue secretory leader sequence
(
27), and a
second hydrophobic region was located at the
carboxy terminus.
The latter region was preceded by residues G613,
A614, and G615,
which forms a potential glycosylphosphatidylinositol
(GPI) attachment
site according to the

,

+1, and

+2 rule
(
39). The protein
also contained three consensus sites for
N-linked glycosylation
(
3).

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FIG. 2.
Predicted amino acid sequence encoded by
HWP1. Identical residues are boxed. Dashes indicate gaps
introduced to maximize the alignment. The line above the sequence
indicates the predicted leader. The arrow indicates the potential
cleavage site. The broken line indicates the C-terminal hydrophobic
region. Potential GPI anchor sites are marked with stars.
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A BLAST (
1) comparison revealed that
ECE2 was
>99% identical to the independently isolated and characterized
HWP1 (for
"hyphal wall protein") (
35). No
obvious homologs were identified.
However, a region of the third repeat
domain of Hwp1p was conserved
in
CHT2, encoding a
C. albicans chitinase (
24), the
S. cerevisiae flocculation protein Flo1p (
4), the

-agglutinin subunit
encoded
by
AGA1 (
29), the pheromone-regulated
protein Fig2p (
9),
and the
SED1-encoded cell wall
protein (
11) (Fig.
3). All of
these proteins are either known or predicted to be GPI-anchored
cell
surface proteins. This conserved domain was characterized
by the
consensus motif YTTWCPL, present in one to five copies.

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FIG. 3.
Alignment of sequences with the conserved WCPL motif.
Numbers to the left and right indicate the location within the amino
acid sequence. R1, R2, etc., indicate consecutive repeats within the
same protein. Residues conserved in at least 60% of the sequences
within the region of overlap are boxed. The proteins and gene accession
numbers are as follows: Cht2p, chitinase 2, U15800; Flo1p, flocculation
protein, X78160; Aga1p, a-agglutinin core subunit, M60590; Sed1p,
suppressor of erd2, X66838; Fig2p, factor induced gene,
YCR089W.
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Construction of deletion mutants.
Expression of
HWP1 correlated with cell elongation and filamentation, and
this suggested a potential role in morphogenesis. Deletion mutants were
constructed to test this possibility. A 434-bp segment of the
HWP1 open reading frame was replaced with the
hisG-URA3-hisG cassette (10) in the
Urd
strain CAI4, as illustrated in Fig.
4A. Integration at the HWP1 locus occurred in 22 of 23 Urd+ transformants. The
wild-type allele yields a 4.3-kb EcoRI band in Southern
blots (Fig. 4B, lane CAI4). The disrupted allele contains an
EcoRI restriction site located in URA3 and yields
a hybridization band of 5.6 kb, as seen in the representative
heterozygous mutant CAL1 (Fig. 4B). Loss of the URA3 gene
and one of the hisG repeats in the Urd
segregant strain CAL2 generated a 5.0-kb band (Fig. 4B). Transformation of CAL2 resulted in replacement of the remaining wild-type allele in 8 of 36 transformants to generate strain CAL3. In these transformants, the 4.3-kb band of the wild-type allele was replaced by a 5.6-kb band
representing the newly disrupted allele (Fig. 4B). Northern analysis
confirmed the absence of HWP1 mRNA in the null mutant.

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FIG. 4.
Construction of HWP1 null mutants. (A)
Schematic representation of the HWP1 disruption scheme. (B)
Southern blot analysis of representative HWP1 disrupted
strains. Genomic DNA was digested with EcoRI and hybridized
with labeled HWP1 DNA.
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Phenotype of the mutants.
HWP1 was nonessential as
evidenced by the viability of the null mutant. No differences in the
rate or frequency of germ tube formation were observed when the
heterozygous or homozygous mutants were inoculated into Spider medium,
the medium of Lee et al., 10% serum, or 25 mM
N-acetylglucosamine. In medium 199, the mutant exhibited
normal germ tube induction, but in approximately half the trials the
germ tubes failed to extend into true hyphae and instead developed a
pseudohyphal morphology. We were unable to identify the source of this
variability. No differences were noted in the heterozygote.
The mutations had a more significant consequence for hyphal development
on solid media. Strain SC5314 showed prolific hyphal
growth, with
lateral extension of the hyphae beyond the border
of the colony (Fig.
5A). The heterozygous mutant, CAL1,
exhibited
greatly reduced hyphal growth, (Fig.
5B), and the null
mutant,
CAL3, exhibited a nearly complete loss of hyphal growth (Fig.
5C). The same results were seen on solid Spider medium and the
medium
of Lee et al. for seven independent heterozygotes and eight
null
mutants. Although the lateral extension of hyphae was compromised,
all
mutants maintained the ability to invade the agar directly
beneath the
colony. Microscopic examination revealed that these
invasive filaments
had a hyphal morphology.

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FIG. 5.
Effect of HWP1 mutation on hyphal formation.
Strains were cultured for 48 h on medium 199 (pH 7) at 37°C (A
to D) or for 24 h on 10% serum (E and F). The strains used are
SC5314 (A and E), CAL1 (B), CAL3 (C and F), and CAL5 (D).
Magnification, ×10.
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When plated on 10% serum, a strong inducer of hyphal formation, all
strains produced peripheral hyphae within 24 h. However,
the
hyphae extending from the null mutant colony were significantly
reduced
in both number and length compared to those in the wild
type (Fig.
5E
and F). By 48 h, the null mutant exhibited extensive
filamentation
around the colony, although the hyphae extended
only half the distance
from the colony as did those of the wild
type. This is in contrast to
incubation on medium 199, where the
mutant failed to develop hyphae
even with extended
incubation.
To confirm that the mutant phenotype was directly associated with the
loss of
HWP1, the wild-type allele was introduced into
the
Urd

homozygous null mutant CAL4 (Fig.
4B) to produce
CAL5. Southern
blot analyses confirmed proper integration of the
functional allele
in 8 of 15 transformants (Fig.
4B). Introduction of
HWP1 restored
hyphal development in all eight of the
revertants (Fig.
5D), verifying
the correspondence between phenotype
and genotype. However, the
revertants, which contained only one
functional allele, did not
exhibit the partial defects evident in the
heterozygous parent
of the null mutant. Instead, they resembled the
homozygous wild
type. This phenotype was evident in several other
independently
constructed revertants and may indicate that the fragment
of the
promoter driving expression of the reintroduced allele is
inadequate
for complete
regulation.
To test whether
HWP1 was simply necessary or both necessary
and sufficient for hypha production, the
HWP1 promoter was
replaced
with the constitutive promoter from
TEF2
(
37) and integrated
into the null mutant strain CAL4.
Constitutive expression of
HWP1 was confirmed by Northern
analysis. Constitutive expression restored
the ability of the mutant to
form hyphae on medium 199 plates.
However, when cells were incubated
under conditions that repress
filamentation (medium 199 plates at pH
4.5 and 25°C), no hyphae
were formed. Thus,
HWP1 is
insufficient to initiate or promote
hyphal
development.
Regulation of HWP1 and ECE1.
Because of the
developmental expression pattern of HWP1 and its involvement
in filamentation, it was potentially under the control of one or more
of the known regulators of this process. Their influence on the
expression of HWP1 was assessed by examining HWP1
induction in the corresponding null mutants. Induction of HWP1 was completely blocked by deletion of EFG1,
either alone or in combination with CPH1 (Fig.
6A). Deletion of CPH1 alone had no effect. Thus, HWP1 expression is under the positive
regulatory control of EFG1 but is independent of the MAP
kinase cascade.

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FIG. 6.
Effect of regulatory mutations on HWP1
expression. RNA was prepared from cells grown under noninducing
conditions (N) or hypha-inducing conditions (I), and the blots were
probed with HWP1 and ACT1. The relevant genotypes
are indicated above the lanes. (A and B) SC5314 was the wild-type
strain (WT). (C) The parental strain of the rbf1 mutant,
1161KR, was used as the control.
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The
EFG1 dependence of
HWP1 expression suggested
the possibility that the defective hyphal development of
efg1 mutants was
due to the absence of HWP1p. To
determine if forced expression
of
HWP1 could suppress the
efg1 mutant phenotype,
HWP1, under
the control
of the constitutive promoter from the
TEF2 gene, was
transformed into the
efg1 background. No changes in the
phenotype
were
observed.
The repressors encoded by both
TUP1 (
6) and
RBF1 (
15) modulated
HWP1 expression.
In a
TUP1 null mutant,
HWP1 was expressed
even
under noninducing conditions (Fig.
6B). However, expression
was lower
than the induced level. Alternatively, deletion of
RBF1 resulted in a 70% reduction of
HWP1 expression under
inducing
conditions (Fig.
6C).
ECE1 exhibits a developmental expression pattern similar to
HWP1, but
ece1 mutants are not affected in
filamentation ability.
However, as with
HWP1, expression of
ECE1 was abrogated in an
EFG1 null mutant (Fig.
7) but occurred normally in a
cph1 background.
TUP1 also had no effect. In
contrast,
ECE1 was not expressed in
the 1161KR strain
background in the presence or absence of the
RBF1 null
mutation.

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FIG. 7.
Effect of regulatory mutations on ECE1
expression. RNA was prepared from cells grown under noninducing
conditions (N) or hypha-inducing conditions (I), and the blots were
probed with ECE1 and ACT1. The relevant genotypes
are indicated above the lanes. SC5314 was the wild-type strain (WT).
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 |
DISCUSSION |
HWP1 was identified in a genetic screen for
developmentally regulated genes. This same gene was previously
identified in an immunological screen for hypha-specific proteins
(35). Deletion analysis revealed that HWP1 is
conditionally required for hyphal formation. The ability to form hyphae
on solid media was severely reduced in the HWP1 heterozygous
mutant and essentially eliminated in the null mutant. In the presence
of serum, colonies of the null mutant were able to produce peripheral
hyphae, but at reduced levels compared to the wild type. Reintroduction
of a functional allele of HWP1 resulted in a return to the
wild-type phenotype, confirming that the loss of HWP1
expression was responsible for the defects in hyphal development in the
mutant strains. All mutants maintained the ability to invade the agar
directly beneath the colony and to form germ tubes in liquid suspension cultures.
Presently, no specific role in hyphal development can be assigned to
HWP1. No homologs or functional motifs were identified. HWP1 encodes a putative GPI-linked surface protein and has
been localized to the cell surface by immunofluorescence labeling
(35). Staab et al. reported that Hwp1p can serve as a
substrate for mammalian transglutaminase and can mediate the stable
attachment of C. albicans hyphae to human buccal epithelial
cells (34). They also reported that HWP1 is
required for virulence in a mouse model of systemic infection, a result
corroborated by Tsuchimori et al. (34, 38).
Hwp1p may belong to a unique subset of GPI-anchored proteins
characterized by the presence of a conserved structural motif, YTTWCPL.
The diverse functions of the proteins that contain this motif suggest
that it imparts a general property, e.g., interaction with specific
surface proteins or wall polysaccharides. The surface localization of
Hwp1p is compatible with diverse functions, from cell wall assembly to
cell signaling. However, Hwp1p is unlikely to participate in the
reception of the initial developmental signal since it is not expressed
in the yeast form and is downstream of the developmental regulator
EFG1. It is also unlikely to function directly in the
formation of the filamentous wall structure. The heterozygous null
mutant exhibited a reduction in the frequency of hyphal elements but no
alteration in their morphology. Similarly, hyphae formed by the null
mutant in the presence of serum, while shorter, appeared otherwise
normal. Thus, Hwp1p may be required for hyphal development to proceed
or be sustained once the signal has been received. Notably, there are
no apparent homologs in the S. cerevisiae genome, and so
HWP1 may be one of the developmental components that allows
true filamentation in C. albicans versus the pseudohyphal
morphology seen in baker's yeast. Whatever its function, the
conditional requirement for HWP1 on solid medium indicates
that the function is either unnecessary or redundant in liquid culture.
HWP1 is the first morphogenic target identified that is
downstream of the signaling components and regulators of hyphal
development. Examining the influence of these regulators on
HWP1 expression has elucidated several facets of hyphal
development. Previous studies had demonstrated that mutation of either
CPH1 or EFG1 alone resulted in partial
suppression of development but that deletion of both genes caused
complete suppression (22). The simplest interpretation of
these results is that CPH1 and EFG1 provide
additive inputs in regulating a set of genes required for
filamentation. However, expression of HWP1 was entirely
EFG1 dependent and was not influenced by CPH1.
This is consistent with the phenotype of the HWP1 null
mutant, which is compromised in hyphal development on several media on
which the
cph1 mutant is not compromised. These results
indicate that CPH1 and EFG1 are components of
separate pathways with different target genes. The
hwp1
and
efg1 mutants differ in that the
hwp1
mutant is able to form true hyphae in the presence of serum while the
efg1 mutant is not. This difference and the inability of
constitutive expression of HWP1 to suppress the
efg1 mutation indicate that EFG1 regulates
additional genes required for hyphal development.
HWP1 expression is also influenced by TUP1 and
RBF1, both negative regulators of hyphal development
(6, 15). HWP1 was partially derepressed under
noninducing conditions in a TUP1 null mutant. The lack of
complete derepression indicates that expression of HWP1 is
under multiple controls and probably requires an additional positive
signal(s). This may be supplied via the EFG1-dependent pathway. The data do not allow us to distinguish whether
TUP1 acts through EFG1 or independently. However,
it is clear from the results that TUP1 acts independently of
CPH1. Previous work had shown that TUP1 mutations
are epistatic to a
cph1 mutation. From this, it could be
inferred that TUP1 functions downstream of CPH1,
assuming that they act within the same pathway. Since TUP1
influences HWP1 expression but CPH1 does not,
CPH1 cannot be acting upstream of TUP1.
Unexpectedly, deletion of RBF1 resulted in reduced
expression of HWP1 under inducing conditions, indicating that RBF1 is a positive regulator of HWP1.
HWP1 is distinguished from other developmentally regulated
genes of C. albicans by its role in filamentation.
ECE1 and HYR1 exhibit a similar patterns of
expression, but null mutations in these genes do not affect
morphogenesis (2, 5). This distinction made it possible to
determine whether the similar developmental expression patterns of
morphogenic and nonmorphogenic genes reflect a common regulation. This
question is relevant to the role of hyphal development in pathogenesis.
As demonstrated by Lo et al. (22), nonfilamentous mutants
are avirulent. However, it is not known if this reflects the inability
of the organism to adopt the filamentous morphology and/or the effect
of the mutations on coregulated virulence determinants. Comparison of
HWP1 and ECE1 expression demonstrated common and
unique regulatory interactions. Expression of both genes was similarly
affected by mutation of EFG1 and unaffected by
CPH1. However, ECE1 was not affected by mutation
of TUP1 and was not induced in strain 1161KR. The lack of
ECE1 expression in 1161KR is probably a consequence of the highly mutagenized genetic background of this strain (15).
Nonetheless, it demonstrates that there are distinct regulatory
features in the developmental expression of HWP1 and
ECE1. Although it is not known if ECE1 encodes a
virulence attribute, the data demonstrate that the regulatory role of
EFG1 extends beyond the control of cell shape determinants.
Furthermore, the observed differences in HWP1 and
ECE1 regulation offers the possibility that expression of
morphogenic and nonmorphogenic functions can be dissociated and their
relative contributions to the virulence process can be independently assessed.
 |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
We thank Yuhko Aoki, Burk Braun, and Gerald Fink for generously
providing strains. L.S. thanks Fritz Muhlschlegal and Shelley Brunt for
helpful discussions and Yonghong Zhang for valuable technical assistance.
This work was supported by Public Health Service grants AI-37194 and
GM47727 and by the Burroughs Wellcome Fund Molecular Pathogenic
Mycology Scholar Award to W.A.F.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of
Microbiology and Immunology, Georgetown University, Washington, DC
20007. Phone: (202) 687-1135. Fax: (202) 687-1800. E-mail:
fonziw{at}medlib.georgetown.edu.
 |
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Journal of Bacteriology, September 1999, p. 5273-5279, Vol. 181, No. 17
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Copyright © 1999, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
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