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Strain and temperature dependent aggregation of Candida auris is attenuated by inhibition of surface amyloid proteins

Authors :
Dhara Malavia-Jones
Rhys A. Farrer
Mark H.T. Stappers
Matt B. Edmondson
Andrew M. Borman
Elizabeth M. Johnson
Peter N. Lipke
Neil A.R. Gow
Source :
The Cell Surface, Vol 10, Iss , Pp 100110- (2023)
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Elsevier, 2023.

Abstract

Candida auris is a multi-drug resistant human fungal pathogen that has become a global threat to human health due to its drug resistant phenotype, persistence in the hospital environment and propensity for patient to patient spread. Isolates display variable aggregation that may affect the relative virulence of strains. Therefore, dissection of this phenotype has gained substantial interest in recent years. We studied eight clinical isolates from four different clades (I-IV); four of which had a strongly aggregating phenotype and four of which did not. Genome analysis identified polymorphisms associated with loss of cell surface proteins were enriched in weakly-aggregating strains. Additionally, we identified down-regulation of chitin synthase genes involved in the synthesis of the chitinous septum. Characterisation of the cells revealed no ultrastructural defects in cytokinesis or cell separation in aggregating isolates. Strongly and weakly aggregating strains did not differ in net surface charge or in cell surface hydrophobicity. The capacity for aggregation and for adhesion to polystyrene microspheres were also not correlated. However, aggregation and extracellular matrix formation were all increased at higher growth temperatures, and treatment with the amyloid protein inhibitor Thioflavin-T markedly attenuated aggregation. Genome analysis further indicated strain specific differences in the genome content of GPI-anchored proteins including those encoding genes with the potential to form amyloid proteins. Collectively our data suggests that aggregation is a complex strain and temperature dependent phenomenon that may be linked in part to the ability to form extracellular matrix and cell surface amyloids.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
24682330
Volume :
10
Issue :
100110-
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
The Cell Surface
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.474986532a0e407591e01236194ffe25
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tcsw.2023.100110