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Journal of Bacteriology, February 2000, p. 704-713, Vol. 182, No. 3
Merck Research Laboratories, Merck and Co.,
Rahway, New Jersey 07065,1 and Tsukuba
Research Institute, Banyu Pharmaceutical Co., Ltd., Tsukuba-City,
Japan 300-26112
Received 14 June 1999/Accepted 2 November 1999
Geranylgeranyltransferase I (GGTase I) catalyzes the transfer of a
prenyl group from geranylgeranyl diphosphate to the carboxy-terminal cysteine of proteins with a motif referred to as a CaaX box (C, cysteine; a, usually aliphatic amino acid; X, usually L). The
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Copyright © 2000, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Geranylgeranyltransferase I of Candida
albicans: Null Mutants or Enzyme Inhibitors Produce
Unexpected Phenotypes
and
subunits of GGTase I from Saccharomyces cerevisiae are encoded by RAM2 and CDC43, respectively, and
each is essential for viability. We are evaluating GGTase I as a
potential target for antimycotic therapy of the related yeast,
Candida albicans, which is the major human pathogen for
disseminated fungal infections. Recently we cloned CaCDC43,
the C. albicans homolog of S. cerevisiae CDC43.
To study its role in C. albicans, both alleles were
sequentially disrupted in strain CAI4. Null Cacdc43 mutants
were viable despite the lack of detectable GGTase I activity but were
morphologically abnormal. The subcellular distribution of two GGTase I
substrates, Rho1p and Cdc42p, was shifted from the membranous fraction
to the cytosolic fraction in the cdc43 mutants, and levels
of these two proteins were elevated compared to those in the parent
strain. Two compounds that are potent GGTase I inhibitors in vitro but that have poor antifungal activity, J-109,390 and L-269,289, caused similar changes in the distribution and quantity of the substrate. The
lethality of an S. cerevisiae cdc43 mutant can be
suppressed by simultaneous overexpression of RHO1 and
CDC42 on high-copy-number plasmids (Y. Ohya et al., Mol.
Biol. Cell 4:1017, 1991; C. A. Trueblood, Y. Ohya, and J. Rine,
Mol. Cell. Biol. 13:4260, 1993). Prenylation presumably occurs by
farnesyltransferase (FTase). We hypothesize that Cdc42p and Rho1p of
C. albicans can be prenylated by FTase when GGTase I is
absent or limiting and that elevation of these two substrates enables
them to compete with FTase substrates for prenylation and thus allows
sustained growth.
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: RY80Y-200, Merck
and Co., P.O. Box 2000, Rahway, NJ 07065. Phone: (732) 594-6385. Fax: (732) 594-5468. E-mail: rosemarie_kelly{at}merck.com.
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