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Basis of cerulenin resistance of two strains of Candida albicans.

Authors :
McElhaney-Feser G
Cihlar RL
Source :
Microbiology (Reading, England) [Microbiology (Reading)] 1995 Jul; Vol. 141 ( Pt 7), pp. 1553-8.
Publication Year :
1995

Abstract

The basis of cerulenin resistance of Candida albicans strains 4918-2 and 4918-10 has been investigated. Parasexual genetic analyses established that cerulenin resistance to concentrations of at least 5 micrograms ml-1 is dominant in both strains. The results also showed that strain 4918-2 is heterozygous for resistance, while the change from resistance to sensitivity of strain 4918-10 is reversible. Experiments to define the mechanism(s) responsible for resistance focused on cerulenin uptake and fatty-acid synthase activity. Cerulenin uptake by strains 4918-2 and 4918-10 was 24% of that of the wild-type (strain 4918). Uptake was restored in UV-induced cerulenin-sensitive segregants of strains 4918-2 and 4918-10, and varied from 63% to 200% of parental values. Fatty-acid synthase from strains 4918-2 and 4918-10 was resistant to cerulenin as judged by differences in the inactivation of the enzyme by the agent. However, inactivation kinetics of fatty-acid synthase of cerulenin-sensitive segregants did not revert to the parental inactivation profile. Further investigation showed that nine out of ten segregants were resistant to cerulenin at concentrations between 1 and 4 micrograms ml-1 while strain 4918 was sensitive to cerulenin at all concentrations tested. Thus, the results suggest that alteration of fatty-acid synthase and changes in permeability contribute to total cerulenin resistance of each strain.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1350-0872
Volume :
141 ( Pt 7)
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Microbiology (Reading, England)
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
7551023
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1099/13500872-141-7-1553