Candida albicans Sfl1/Sfl2 regulatory network drives the formation of pathogenic microcolonies.

Candida albicans is an opportunistic fungal pathogen that can infect oral mucosal surfaces while being under continuous flow from saliva. Under specific conditions, C. albicans will form microcolonies that more closely resemble the biofilms formed in vivo than standard in vitro biofilm models. Howev...

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Main Authors: Andrew D McCall, Rohitashw Kumar, Mira Edgerton
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2018-09-01
Series:PLoS Pathogens
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1007316
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spelling doaj-cac453e768ab411b9e6b3042aef936582021-04-21T17:11:48ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS Pathogens1553-73661553-73742018-09-01149e100731610.1371/journal.ppat.1007316Candida albicans Sfl1/Sfl2 regulatory network drives the formation of pathogenic microcolonies.Andrew D McCallRohitashw KumarMira EdgertonCandida albicans is an opportunistic fungal pathogen that can infect oral mucosal surfaces while being under continuous flow from saliva. Under specific conditions, C. albicans will form microcolonies that more closely resemble the biofilms formed in vivo than standard in vitro biofilm models. However, very little is known about these microcolonies, particularly genomic differences between these specialized biofilm structures and the traditional in vitro biofilms. In this study, we used a novel flow system, in which C. albicans spontaneously forms microcolonies, to further characterize the architecture of fungal microcolonies and their genomics compared to non-microcolony conditions. Fungal microcolonies arose from radially branching filamentous hyphae that increasingly intertwined with one another to form extremely dense biofilms, and closely resembled the architecture of in vivo oropharyngeal candidiasis. We identified 20 core microcolony genes that were differentially regulated in flow-induced microcolonies using RNA-seq. These genes included HWP1, ECE1, IHD1, PLB1, HYR1, PGA10, and SAP5. A predictive algorithm was utilized to identify ten transcriptional regulators potentially involved in microcolony formation. Of these transcription factors, we found that Rob1, Ndt80, Sfl1 and Sfl2, played a key role in microcolony formation under both flow and static conditions and to epithelial surfaces. Expression of core microcolony genes were highly up-regulated in Δsfl1 cells and down-regulated in both Δsfl2 and Δrob1 strains. Microcolonies formed on oral epithelium using C. albicans Δsfl1, Δsfl2 and Δrob1 deletion strains all had altered adhesion, invasion and cytotoxicity. Furthermore, epithelial cells infected with deletion mutants had reduced (SFL2, NDT80, and ROB1) or enhanced (SFL2) immune responses, evidenced by phosphorylation of MKP1 and c-Fos activation, key signal transducers in the hyphal invasion response. This profile of microcolony transcriptional regulators more closely reflects Sfl1 and Sfl2 hyphal regulatory networks than static biofilm regulatory networks, suggesting that microcolonies are a specialized pathogenic form of biofilm.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1007316
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Andrew D McCall
Rohitashw Kumar
Mira Edgerton
spellingShingle Andrew D McCall
Rohitashw Kumar
Mira Edgerton
Candida albicans Sfl1/Sfl2 regulatory network drives the formation of pathogenic microcolonies.
PLoS Pathogens
author_facet Andrew D McCall
Rohitashw Kumar
Mira Edgerton
author_sort Andrew D McCall
title Candida albicans Sfl1/Sfl2 regulatory network drives the formation of pathogenic microcolonies.
title_short Candida albicans Sfl1/Sfl2 regulatory network drives the formation of pathogenic microcolonies.
title_full Candida albicans Sfl1/Sfl2 regulatory network drives the formation of pathogenic microcolonies.
title_fullStr Candida albicans Sfl1/Sfl2 regulatory network drives the formation of pathogenic microcolonies.
title_full_unstemmed Candida albicans Sfl1/Sfl2 regulatory network drives the formation of pathogenic microcolonies.
title_sort candida albicans sfl1/sfl2 regulatory network drives the formation of pathogenic microcolonies.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS Pathogens
issn 1553-7366
1553-7374
publishDate 2018-09-01
description Candida albicans is an opportunistic fungal pathogen that can infect oral mucosal surfaces while being under continuous flow from saliva. Under specific conditions, C. albicans will form microcolonies that more closely resemble the biofilms formed in vivo than standard in vitro biofilm models. However, very little is known about these microcolonies, particularly genomic differences between these specialized biofilm structures and the traditional in vitro biofilms. In this study, we used a novel flow system, in which C. albicans spontaneously forms microcolonies, to further characterize the architecture of fungal microcolonies and their genomics compared to non-microcolony conditions. Fungal microcolonies arose from radially branching filamentous hyphae that increasingly intertwined with one another to form extremely dense biofilms, and closely resembled the architecture of in vivo oropharyngeal candidiasis. We identified 20 core microcolony genes that were differentially regulated in flow-induced microcolonies using RNA-seq. These genes included HWP1, ECE1, IHD1, PLB1, HYR1, PGA10, and SAP5. A predictive algorithm was utilized to identify ten transcriptional regulators potentially involved in microcolony formation. Of these transcription factors, we found that Rob1, Ndt80, Sfl1 and Sfl2, played a key role in microcolony formation under both flow and static conditions and to epithelial surfaces. Expression of core microcolony genes were highly up-regulated in Δsfl1 cells and down-regulated in both Δsfl2 and Δrob1 strains. Microcolonies formed on oral epithelium using C. albicans Δsfl1, Δsfl2 and Δrob1 deletion strains all had altered adhesion, invasion and cytotoxicity. Furthermore, epithelial cells infected with deletion mutants had reduced (SFL2, NDT80, and ROB1) or enhanced (SFL2) immune responses, evidenced by phosphorylation of MKP1 and c-Fos activation, key signal transducers in the hyphal invasion response. This profile of microcolony transcriptional regulators more closely reflects Sfl1 and Sfl2 hyphal regulatory networks than static biofilm regulatory networks, suggesting that microcolonies are a specialized pathogenic form of biofilm.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1007316
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