Circuit diversification in a biofilm regulatory network.

Genotype-phenotype relationships can vary extensively among members of a species. One cause of this variation is circuit diversification, the alteration of gene regulatory relationships among members of a species. Circuit diversification is thought to be a starting point for the circuit divergence o...

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Main Authors: Manning Y Huang, Carol A Woolford, Gemma May, C Joel McManus, Aaron P Mitchell
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2019-05-01
Series:PLoS Pathogens
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1007787
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spelling doaj-9053167b48754a72b747454e87ce545d2021-04-21T17:12:29ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS Pathogens1553-73661553-73742019-05-01155e100778710.1371/journal.ppat.1007787Circuit diversification in a biofilm regulatory network.Manning Y HuangCarol A WoolfordGemma MayC Joel McManusAaron P MitchellGenotype-phenotype relationships can vary extensively among members of a species. One cause of this variation is circuit diversification, the alteration of gene regulatory relationships among members of a species. Circuit diversification is thought to be a starting point for the circuit divergence or rewiring that occurs during speciation. How widespread is circuit diversification? Here we address this question with the fungal pathogen Candida albicans, which forms biofilms rich in distinctive hyphal cells as a prelude to infection. Our understanding of the biofilm/hyphal regulatory network comes primarily from studies of one clinical isolate, strain SC5314, and its marked derivatives. We used CRISPR-based methods to create mutations of four key biofilm transcription factor genes-BCR1, UME6, BRG1, and EFG1 -in SC5314 and four additional clinical isolates. Phenotypic analysis revealed that mutations in BCR1 or UME6 have variable impact across strains, while mutations in BRG1 or EFG1 had uniformly severe impact. Gene expression, sampled with Nanostring probes and examined comprehensively for EFG1 via RNA-Seq, indicates that regulatory relationships are highly variable among isolates. Our results suggest that genotype-phenotype relationships vary in this strain panel in part because of differences in control of BRG1 by BCR1, a hypothesis that is supported through engineered constitutive expression of BRG1. Overall, the data show that circuit diversification is the rule, not the exception, in this biofilm/hyphal regulatory network.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1007787
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Manning Y Huang
Carol A Woolford
Gemma May
C Joel McManus
Aaron P Mitchell
spellingShingle Manning Y Huang
Carol A Woolford
Gemma May
C Joel McManus
Aaron P Mitchell
Circuit diversification in a biofilm regulatory network.
PLoS Pathogens
author_facet Manning Y Huang
Carol A Woolford
Gemma May
C Joel McManus
Aaron P Mitchell
author_sort Manning Y Huang
title Circuit diversification in a biofilm regulatory network.
title_short Circuit diversification in a biofilm regulatory network.
title_full Circuit diversification in a biofilm regulatory network.
title_fullStr Circuit diversification in a biofilm regulatory network.
title_full_unstemmed Circuit diversification in a biofilm regulatory network.
title_sort circuit diversification in a biofilm regulatory network.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS Pathogens
issn 1553-7366
1553-7374
publishDate 2019-05-01
description Genotype-phenotype relationships can vary extensively among members of a species. One cause of this variation is circuit diversification, the alteration of gene regulatory relationships among members of a species. Circuit diversification is thought to be a starting point for the circuit divergence or rewiring that occurs during speciation. How widespread is circuit diversification? Here we address this question with the fungal pathogen Candida albicans, which forms biofilms rich in distinctive hyphal cells as a prelude to infection. Our understanding of the biofilm/hyphal regulatory network comes primarily from studies of one clinical isolate, strain SC5314, and its marked derivatives. We used CRISPR-based methods to create mutations of four key biofilm transcription factor genes-BCR1, UME6, BRG1, and EFG1 -in SC5314 and four additional clinical isolates. Phenotypic analysis revealed that mutations in BCR1 or UME6 have variable impact across strains, while mutations in BRG1 or EFG1 had uniformly severe impact. Gene expression, sampled with Nanostring probes and examined comprehensively for EFG1 via RNA-Seq, indicates that regulatory relationships are highly variable among isolates. Our results suggest that genotype-phenotype relationships vary in this strain panel in part because of differences in control of BRG1 by BCR1, a hypothesis that is supported through engineered constitutive expression of BRG1. Overall, the data show that circuit diversification is the rule, not the exception, in this biofilm/hyphal regulatory network.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1007787
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