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The fitness costs and benefits of trisomy of each Candida albicans chromosome
- Source :
- Genetics
- Publication Year :
- 2021
- Publisher :
- Oxford University Press (OUP), 2021.
-
Abstract
- Candida albicans is a prevalent human fungal pathogen. Rapid genomic change, due to aneuploidy, is a common mechanism that facilitates survival from multiple types of stresses including the few classes of available antifungal drugs. The stress survival of aneuploids occurs despite the fitness costs attributed to most aneuploids growing under idealized lab conditions. Systematic study of the aneuploid state in C. albicans has been hindered by the lack of a comprehensive collection of aneuploid strains. Here, we describe a collection of diploid C. albicans aneuploid strains, each carrying one extra copy of each chromosome, all from the same genetic background. We tested the fitness of this collection under several physiological conditions including shifts in pH, low glucose, oxidative stress, temperature, high osmolarity, membrane stress, and cell wall stress. We found that most aneuploids, under most conditions, were less fit than their euploid parent, yet there were specific conditions under which specific aneuploid isolates provided a fitness benefit relative to the euploid parent strain. Importantly, this fitness benefit was attributable to the change in the copy number of specific chromosomes. Thus, C. albicans can tolerate aneuploidy of each chromosome and some aneuploids confer improved growth under conditions that the yeast encounters in its host niches.
- Subjects :
- Monosomy
Antifungal Agents
Aneuploidy
Trisomy
03 medical and health sciences
Drug Resistance, Fungal
Candida albicans
Genetics
medicine
Humans
030304 developmental biology
0303 health sciences
Host Microbial Interactions
biology
030306 microbiology
Candidiasis
Chromosome
medicine.disease
biology.organism_classification
Communications
Corpus albicans
Tetrasomy
Genetic Fitness
Chromosomes, Fungal
Genome, Fungal
Ploidy
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 19432631
- Volume :
- 218
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Genetics
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....68820890297f0b8c975796b9fad69a3d