101. The STE12alpha homolog is required for haploid filamentation but largely dispensable for mating and virulence in Cryptococcus neoformans
- Author
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John R. Perfect, L. M. Cavallo, Ping Wang, Joseph Heitman, Changli Yue, Gary M. Cox, and J. A. Alspaugh
- Subjects
Mating type ,Saccharomyces cerevisiae Proteins ,Saccharomyces cerevisiae ,Molecular Sequence Data ,Virulence ,Mating Factor ,Locus (genetics) ,Haploidy ,Meningitis, Cryptococcal ,Microbiology ,Fungal Proteins ,Mice ,Genetics ,Animals ,Amino Acid Sequence ,DNA Primers ,Cryptococcus neoformans ,Fungal protein ,Mice, Inbred BALB C ,biology ,Base Sequence ,Sequence Homology, Amino Acid ,biology.organism_classification ,Mating of yeast ,Female ,Peptides ,Transcription Factors ,Research Article - Abstract
Cryptococcus neoformans is a fungal pathogen that causes meningitis in immunocompromised hosts. The organism has a known sexual cycle, and strains of the MATα mating type are more virulent than isogenic MATa strains in mice, and they are more common in the environment and infected hosts. A C. neoformans homolog of the STE12 transcription factor that regulates mating, filamentation, and virulence in Saccharomyces cerevisiae and Candida albicans was identified previously, found to be encoded by a novel region of the MATα mating type locus, and shown to enhance filamentous growth when overexpressed. We have disrupted the C. neoformans STE12 gene in a pathogenic serotype A isolate. ste12 mutant strains exhibit a severe defect in filamentation and sporulation (haploid fruiting) in response to nitrogen starvation. In contrast, ste12 mutant strains have only modest mating defects and are fully virulent in two animal models compared to the STE12 wild-type strain. In genetic epistasis experiments, STE12 functions in a MAP kinase cascade to regulate fruiting, but not mating. Thus, the C. neoformans STE12α transcription factor homolog plays a specialized function in haploid fruiting, but it is dispensable or redundant for mating and virulence. The association of the MATα locus with virulence may involve additional genes, and other transcription factors that regulate mating and virulence remain to be identified.
- Published
- 1999