Back to Search Start Over

Calcineurin-mediated intracellular organelle calcium homeostasis is required for the survival of fungal pathogens upon extracellular calcium stimuli

Authors :
Ling Lu
Yuanwei Zhang
Yiran Ren
Huiyu Gu
Lu Gao
Chi Zhang
Source :
Virulence, Vol 12, Iss 1, Pp 1091-1110 (2021), Virulence, article-version (VoR) Version of Record
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Informa UK Limited, 2021.

Abstract

In eukaryotes, calcium not only is an essential mineral nutrient but also serves as an intracellular second messenger that is necessary for many physiological processes. Previous studies showed that the protein phosphatase-calcineurin protects fungi from toxicity caused by the extracellular calcium; however, little is known about how calcineurin mediates the cellular physiology process for this function. In this study, by monitoring intracellular calcium, particularly by tracking vacuolar calcium dynamics in living cells through a novel procedure using modified aequorin, we found that calcineurin dysfunction systematically caused abnormal intracellular calcium homeostasis in cytosol, mitochondria, and vacuole, leading to drastic autophagy, global organelle fragmentation accompanied with the increased expression of cell death-related enzymes, and cell death upon extracellular calcium stimuli. Notably, all detectable defective phenotypes seen with calcineurin mutants can be significantly suppressed by alleviating a cytosolic calcium overload or increasing vacuolar calcium storage capacity, suggesting toxicity of exogenous calcium to calcineurin mutants is tightly associated with abnormal cytosolic calcium accumulation and vacuolar calcium storage capacity deficiency. Our findings provide insights into how the original recognized antifungal drug target-calcineurin regulates intracellular calcium homeostasis for cell survival and may have important implications for antifungal therapy and clinical drug administration.

Details

ISSN :
21505608 and 21505594
Volume :
12
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Virulence
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....a7d3740b654e764cca7bc70b65baaed9
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1080/21505594.2021.1909954