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Opportunistic pathogens have become of increasing medical importance over the last decade due to the AIDS pandemic. Not only is cryptococcosis the fourth-most-common fatal infectious disease in sub-Saharan Africa, but also Cryptococcus is an emerging pathogen of immunocompetent individuals. The interaction between Cryptococcus and the host''s immune system is a major determinant for the outcome of disease. Despite initial infection in early childhood with Cryptococcus neoformans and frequent exposure to C. neoformans within the environment, immunocompetent individuals are generally able to contain the fungus or maintain the yeast in a latent state. However, immune deficiencies lead to disseminating infections that are uniformly fatal without rapid clinical intervention. This review will discuss the innate and adaptive immune responses to Cryptococcus and cryptococcal strategies to evade the host''s defense mechanisms. It will also address the importance of these strategies in pathogenesis and the potential of immunotherapy in cryptococcosis treatment.The basidiomycetous yeast genus Cryptococcus includes the two medically important pathogens C. neoformans and C. gattii. These two species are further divided into C. neoformans serotypes A (C. neoformans var. grubii), D (C. neoformans var. neoformans), and A/D and C. gattii serotypes B and C (formerly C. neoformans var. gattii) based on differential antibody recognition of the polysaccharide capsule (135). The two pathogenic species show different geographical distributions. C. neoformans is globally distributed and has been isolated from various natural sources, with particularly high concentrations occurring in avian guano, rotting vegetables, and soil. In contrast, C. gattii is geographically restricted to tropical and subtropical regions, with the notable exception of British Columbia. In tropical and subtropical regions, it has been found to be associated with the eucalyptus species Eucalyptus camaldulensis, Eucalyptus tereticornis, Eucalyptus rudis, and Eucalyptus gomphocephala (64, 172). C. neoformans causes mainly opportunistic infections in immunocompromised patients with underlying conditions, such as HIV, leukemia, and other cancers, or in those taking corticosteroid medication (135). Serotype A is responsible for the majority of cryptococcosis cases in immunocompromised hosts (135). In contrast, C. gattii affects mainly immunocompetent individuals. The recent and spreading cryptococcosis outbreak in healthy individuals in British Columbia has highlighted the potential of C. gattii to act as an emerging pathogen (84, 85, 121). In addition, other non-C. neoformans/non-C. gattii species, such as Cryptococcus laurentii and Cryptococcus albidus, have recently started to emerge as potential human pathogens (83).Cryptococcal infection can be asymptomatic, chronic, or acute. Typically, an initial pulmonary infection can spread systemically, with a particular predilection for the central nervous system. Pulmonary infections are in most cases asymptomatic. However, they can involve coughing, pleuritic chest pain, fever, dyspnoea, weight loss, and malaise. Pneumonia and acute respiratory distress syndrome have been reported mainly for immunocompromised patients (17, 141). Cryptococcosis of the central nervous system is life threatening and presents as meningitis or meningoencephalitis, with symptoms such as headache, increased intracranial pressure, fever, lethargy, coma, personality changes, and memory loss. Less common are secondary infections of the skin, lungs, prostate, and eye (135). A recent publication estimated 957,900 cases of cryptococcal meningitis resulting in 624,700 deaths globally each year (150). It is the leading cause of death in HIV-infected individuals, with an incidence of 30% and a mortality of 30 to 60%. The mortality rate in transplant patients is even higher (20 to 100%) (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention) (135).The dramatic course of Cryptococcus infections in immunocompromised individuals shows the importance of an intact immune response to the pathogen. This review will consider both the host''s innate and adaptive immune responses to C. neoformans and C. gattii together with the pathogens'' strategy to undermine these defense mechanisms and how current knowledge might be applied to improve anticryptococcal therapy.  相似文献   

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AMT/Mep ammonium transporters mediate high affinity ammonium/ammonia uptake in bacteria, fungi, and plants. The Arabidopsis AMT1 proteins mediate uptake of the ionic form of ammonium. AMT transport activity is controlled allosterically via a highly conserved cytosolic C terminus that interacts with neighboring subunits in a trimer. The C terminus is thus capable of modulating the conductivity of the pore. To gain insight into the underlying mechanism, pore mutants suppressing the inhibitory effect of mutations in the C-terminal trans-activation domain were characterized. AMT1;1 carrying the mutation Q57H in transmembrane helix I (TMH I) showed increased ammonium uptake but reduced capacity to take up methylammonium. To explore whether the transport mechanism was altered, the AMT1;1-Q57H mutant was expressed in Xenopus oocytes and analyzed electrophysiologically. AMT1;1-Q57H was characterized by increased ammonium-induced and reduced methylammonium-induced currents. AMT1;1-Q57H possesses a 100× lower affinity for ammonium (Km) and a 10-fold higher Vmax as compared with the wild type form. To test whether the trans-regulatory mechanism is conserved in archaeal homologs, AfAmt-2 from Archaeoglobus fulgidus was expressed in yeast. The transport function of AfAmt-2 also depends on trans-activation by the C terminus, and mutations in pore-residues corresponding to Q57H of AMT1;1 suppress nonfunctional AfAmt-2 mutants lacking the activating C terminus. Altogether, our data suggest that bacterial and plant AMTs use a conserved allosteric mechanism to control ammonium flux, potentially using a gating mechanism that limits flux to protect against ammonium toxicity.All organisms depend on an adequate supply of nutrients, especially nitrogen. For microorganisms and plants, which are able to assimilate ammonium, NH4+ represents the sole bioavailable nitrogen form. (Nitrate use requires enzymatic conversion to ammonia.) Plants preferentially take up ammonium; however, overaccumulation of NH4+ is toxic to microorganisms and plants (1, 2.) Levels above 50 μm become toxic for the central nervous system of most mammals (3, 4). A precise homeostasis of the cellular levels of ammonium is therefore critical.Plant ammonium uptake is mediated by low affinity/high capacity and high affinity/low capacity transporters (5). Nonselective cation channels (2), potassium channels (6), and members of the aquaporin family appear to be able to mediate NH3/NH4+ low affinity uptake (79). High affinity uptake by transporters of the AMT/Mep superfamily is essential at supply levels in the micromolar to low millimolar range (1012). AMT/Mep ammonium transporter genes were originally identified in yeast and plants by complementation of a yeast mutant deficient in ammonium uptake (13, 14). In contrast to potassium channels, which do not effectively differentiate between potassium and ammonium, AMTs are highly selective for ammonium and its methylated form, methylammonium (MeA).6 Plant AMT1 ammonium transporters were shown to be electrogenic when expressed in Xenopus oocytes, suggesting transport of charged NH4+ or co-transport of NH3 with a proton (15). Quantitation of charge movement and tracer uptake demonstrated that AMT1 transports exclusively the ionic form, i.e. each transported 14C-MeA molecule corresponded to the transfer of a single positive elementary charge across the membrane (16). The high affinity and low capacity of AMT1, which is too slow to be classified as a channel, suggests that it rather functions as a transporter, with significant conformational changes limiting its turnover numbers. Interestingly, it has been suggested that the bacterial homologs use a different mechanism, in that they mediate transport of uncharged NH3 (17), although this hypothesis has been disputed (18, 19).Biochemical as well as structural analyses of bacterial and archaeal AMTs revealed a highly stable and conserved trimeric complex (15). Each monomer is composed of 11 transmembrane helices (TMHs) that form a noncontinuous channel through which the substrate can pass. Highly conserved residues are observed in positions that are likely crucial for function: a tryptophan located in a central extracellular surface cleft is thought to be part of a selectivity filter, discriminating K+ ions and water molecules from NH4+ via a cation-π interaction and H-bonds via neighboring residues. Below this cleft, a pair of phenylalanines is assumed to function as a gate that blocks the entrance of the channel, which, after that point, appears open to the cytoplasmic side. Two histidines on helices V and VI are in H-bonding distance and line the central part of the channel pathway.Similar to the bacterial Na+/leucine and the Na+/arabinose transporters (20, 21), AMT monomers are built from an ancient duplication of a subunit of five TMHs, organized as a pseudo-2-fold axis in the membrane plane; in the case of the AMT/Meps, an additional 11th segment M11 (5 + 5 + 1), a 50-Å α-helix, belts the surface of the monomer at an angle of ∼50° relative to the normal vector of the membrane plane and connects to the cytosolic C terminus (17, 23, 24). Recent findings demonstrate that AMTs can exist in active and inactive states, probably controlled by phosphorylation of residues in the conserved C terminus (25).7 In the Arabidopsis thaliana AMT1, an allosteric trans-activation is mediated through the interaction of the C termini with cytosolic loops of the neighboring subunits in a trimer (25). This finding is consistent with a novel regulatory mechanism that can provide for rapid shut-off of transport. This feedback loop may potentially be important for protection against ammonium toxicity by limiting peak output, namely ammonium uptake capacity at high external supply. Analysis of >900 AMT homologs shows that the C terminus is highly conserved from cyanobacteria to fungi and plants, indicating that the regulatory mechanism may be conserved (25).A suppressor screen using inactive mutants carrying a mutation in the cytosolic C terminus of AMT1;1 identified mutants that had lost their strict dependence on allosteric trans-activation (25). Here, we show that, when expressed in yeast, some of these mutants show increased ammonium transport capacity. Electrophysiological analysis of one of the pore mutants, AMT1;1-Q57H, demonstrates that transport is still electrogenic and that the increased ammonium sensitivity is due to a conversion from a saturable high affinity kinetic profile to low affinity and high capacity uptake kinetics. Mutation of the corresponding glutamine residue (Q53H) also suppresses an inactive mutant of the archaeal Archaeoglobus fulgidus AfAmt-2, demonstrating the conservation of these mechanisms from archaea to higher plants.  相似文献   

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Molecules composed of β-1,4-linked N-acetylglucosamine (GlcNAc) and deacetylated glucosamine units play key roles as surface constituents of the human pathogenic fungus Cryptococcus neoformans. GlcNAc is the monomeric unit of chitin and chitooligomers, which participate in the connection of capsular polysaccharides to the cryptococcal cell wall. In the present study, we evaluated the role of GlcNAc-containing structures in the assembly of the cryptococcal capsule. The in vivo expression of chitooligomers in C. neoformans varied depending on the infected tissue, as inferred from the differential reactivity of yeast forms to the wheat germ agglutinin (WGA) in infected brain and lungs of rats. Chromatographic and dynamic light-scattering analyses demonstrated that glucuronoxylomannan (GXM), the major cryptococcal capsular component, interacts with chitin and chitooligomers. When added to C. neoformans cultures, chitooligomers formed soluble complexes with GXM and interfered in capsular assembly, as manifested by aberrant capsules with defective connections with the cell wall and no reactivity with a monoclonal antibody to GXM. Cultivation of C. neoformans in the presence of an inhibitor of glucosamine 6-phosphate synthase resulted in altered expression of cell wall chitin. These cells formed capsules that were loosely connected to the cryptococcal wall and contained fibers with decreased diameters and altered monosaccharide composition. These results contribute to our understanding of the role played by chitin and chitooligosaccharides on the cryptococcal capsular structure, broadening the functional activities attributed to GlcNAc-containing structures in this biological system.Cryptococcus neoformans is the etiologic agent of cryptococcosis, a disease still characterized by high morbidity and mortality despite antifungal therapy (3). Pathogenic species belonging to the Cryptococcus genus also include Cryptococcus gattii, which causes disease mostly in immunocompetent individuals (24). A unique characteristic of Cryptococcus species is the presence of a polysaccharide capsule, which is essential for virulence (7-9, 19, 25, 33).C. neoformans has a complex cell surface. The thick fungal cell wall is composed of polysaccharides (29), pigments (11), lipids (35), and proteins (36). External to the cryptococcal cell wall, capsular polysaccharides form a capsule (19). Seemingly, the assembly of the surface envelope of C. neoformans requires the interaction of cell wall components with capsular elements. Some of the cryptococcal cell wall-capsule connectors have been identified, including the structural polysaccharide α-1,3-glucan and chitooligomers (29, 30, 32).Chitin-like molecules in fungi are polymerized by chitin synthases, which use cytoplasmic pools of UDP-GlcNAc (N-acetylglucosamine) to form β-1,4-linked oligosaccharides and large polymers. In C. neoformans, the final cellular site of chitin accumulation is the cell wall. The polysaccharide is also used for chitosan synthesis through enzymatic deacetylation (1). Eight putative cryptococcal chitin synthase genes and three regulator proteins have been identified (2). The chitin synthase Chs3 and regulator Csr2 may form a complex with chitin deacetylases for conversion of chitin to chitosan (1). Key early events in the synthesis of chitin/chitosan require the activity of glucosamine 6-phosphate synthase, which promotes the glutamine-dependent amination of fructose 6-phosphate to form glucosamine 6-phosphate, a substrate used for UDP-GlcNAc synthesis (23).In a previous study, we demonstrated that β-1,4-linked GlcNAc oligomers, which are specifically recognized by the wheat germ agglutinin (WGA), form bridge-like connections between the cell wall and the capsule of C. neoformans (32). In fact, other reports indicate that molecules composed of GlcNAc or its deacetylated derivative play key roles in C. neoformans structural biology. For example, mutations in the genes responsible for the expression of chitin synthase 3 or of the biosynthetic regulator Csr2p caused the loss of the ability to retain the virulence-related pigment melanin in the cell wall (1, 2). These cells were also defective in the synthesis of chitosan, which has also been demonstrated to regulate the retention of cell wall melanin (1). Treatment of C. neoformans acapsular mutants with chitinase affected the incorporation of capsular components into the cell wall (32). Considering that melanin and capsular components are crucial for virulence, these results strongly suggest that GlcNAc-derived molecules are key components of the C. neoformans cell surface. The expression of GlcNAc-containing molecules is likely to be modulated during infection since chitinase expression by host cells is induced during lung cryptococcosis (37).In this study, we used β-1,4-linked GlcNAc oligomers and an inhibitor of UDP-GlcNAc synthesis to evaluate the role played by GlcNAc-containing molecules in the surface architecture of C. neoformans. The results point to a direct relationship between the expression of GlcNAc-containing molecules and capsular assembly, indicating that chitin and chitooligomers are required for capsule organization in C. neoformans.  相似文献   

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The opportunistic intracellular fungal pathogen Cryptococcus neoformans depends on many antioxidant and denitrosylating proteins and pathways for virulence in the immunocompromised host. These include the glutathione and thioredoxin pathways, thiol peroxidase, cytochrome c peroxidase, and flavohemoglobin denitrosylase. All of these ultimately depend on NADPH for either catalytic activity or maintenance of a reduced, functional form. The need for NADPH during oxidative stress is well established in many systems, but a role in resistance to nitrosative stress has not been as well characterized. In this study we investigated the roles of two sources of NADPH, glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (Zwf1) and NADP+-dependent isocitrate dehydrogenase (Idp1), in production of NADPH and resistance to oxidative and nitrosative stress. Deletion of ZWF1 in C. neoformans did not result in an oxidative stress sensitivity phenotype or changes in the amount of NADPH produced during oxidative stress compared to those for the wild type. Deletion of IDP1 resulted in greater sensitivity to nitrosative stress than to oxidative stress. The amount of NADPH increased 2-fold over that in the wild type during nitrosative stress, and yet the idp1Δ strain accumulated more mitochondrial damage than the wild type during nitrosative stress. This is the first report of the importance of Idp1 and NADPH for nitrosative stress resistance.The alveolar macrophage can produce microbicidal amounts of toxic reactive oxygen species (ROS) and reactive nitrogen species (RNS) following phagocytosis (27, 53). Despite this, the opportunistic fungal pathogen Cryptococcus neoformans is able to inhabit and replicate within phagocytes of the mammalian host and to exit these cells unharmed (1, 2, 40). The intracellular pathogenicity of C. neoformans is most likely facilitated by stress resistance mechanisms, including a number of antioxidant proteins and pathways involved in the detoxification of ROS and RNS. Specifically, these include the synthesis of mannitol, a free radical scavenger (9, 20); the small protein flavohemoglobin denitrosylase (Fhb1), which is essential for resistance of C. neoformans to nitrosative stress (10, 14, 32); and the glutathione and thioredoxin antioxidant systems, which are both important for stress resistance and virulence (42, 43, 45).Even with different mechanisms of catalysis and/or cellular localization, one thing that these stress resistance proteins and pathways have in common is the requirement for NADPH as a cofactor. NADPH is used as an electron donor either in recycling of oxidized, inactive enzymes to reduced, active forms or directly in catalytic activity. For example, Fhb1 binds NADPH during its catalytic activity and uses it directly as an electron donor for the reduction of NO· to NO3 (21). Catalases, which are highly conserved antioxidants that dismute H2O2 to molecular oxygen and water, consist of four units each with a molecule of NADPH bound in the core (18, 36, 59). The tripeptide glutathione (GSH) is oxidized to glutathione disulfide (GSSG), a homodimer held together by a disulfide bridge, during its oxidative state. GSSG can be reduced back to GSH by glutathione reductase, an enzyme that requires NADPH for electrons used in reduction. Similarly, glutathione peroxidase and thiol peroxidase ultimately depend on NADPH for recycling from an oxidized, inactive form back to a reduced, active form (57).NADPH is classically recognized as being produced by the highly conserved, cytosolic pentose phosphate pathway. This pathway has been shown to be important for reductive biochemistry during oxidative stress in many organisms. The pentose phosphate pathway is an essential factor in maintaining health of erythrocytes, cells that, due to their biological function, have considerable risk for oxidative damage. Humans deficient in the pathway have hemolytic anemia, as their erythrocytes are unable to maintain sufficient pools of reduced glutathione (68). Also, the pressure of oxidative stress can stimulate the pentose phosphate pathway. This has been shown in human lymphocytes (56); in the rat adrenal gland, liver, and pancreas (15, 16); and in bacteria (63).In fungi, the pentose phosphate pathway has been implicated in both oxidative stress resistance and adaptation to oxidative stress. In the model yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae, NADPH-generating systems, including the pentose phosphate pathway, are critical for the ability of this organism to resist and adapt to high levels of oxidative stress (35, 47). It has also been shown that the cytosolic copper/zinc superoxide dismutase and the pentose phosphate pathway have overlapping roles in protecting S. cerevisiae from oxidative stress and that both systems are critical for maintaining the intracellular redox state (62). Furthermore, fungi may rely on the pentose phosphate pathway for more than reducing oxidative stress. Aspergillus nidulans requires a functional pentose phosphate pathway for nitrogen metabolism. Four A. nidulans mutants with independent defects in the pentose phosphate pathway were unable to grow on nitrite, nitrate, or various carbon sources, including 1% glucose, d-xylose, or d-glucoronate (28).The pathway has two phases, the oxidative phase and the nonoxidative phase. The oxidative phase consists of two successive oxidations and results in the production of NADPH. The first enzyme in the oxidative phase of the pentose phosphate pathway is glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (Zwf). Zwf catalyzes the oxidation of glucose-6-phosphate to 6-phosphogluconate and is highly specific for NADP+ as a cofactor (49, 67). There is abundant evidence supporting the role of Zwf in oxidative stress resistance. In addition to Zwf deficiency causing hemolytic anemia, Zwf has been also been implicated in maintenance of DNA repair systems during oxidative stress, as some cancers and aging disorders have also been linked to Zwf deficiency (30). For instance, Chinese hamster ovarian cells that are Zwf null have enhanced radiation sensitivity and a reduced ability to repair double-strand breaks due to the inactivation of Ku, a heterodimer DNA repair protein. In this case, the inactivation of Ku is the result of overoxidation of key cysteine residues on the protein due to the lack of sufficient reduced GSH (3). In the model yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae, deletion of ZWF1 results in sensitivity to oxidative stress. ZWF1 is also important for the adaptive response to oxidative stress in S. cerevisiae. ZWF1-null mutants and wild-type cells were pretreated with 0.2 mM H2O2 and then challenged with 2 mM H2O2. While a large increase in tolerance to the high level of H2O2 was observed in the wild-type cells pretreated with 0.2 mM H2O2, the zwf1Δ strain was unable to tolerate the higher concentration (33). In Candida albicans, another pathogenic fungus, ZWF1 is upregulated during oxidative stress (38).Another source of NADPH is NADP+-dependent isocitrate dehydrogenase (Idp) (55), a ubiquitous enzyme that in systems ranging from humans to yeasts to plants has been found in the cytosol, peroxisomes, or mitochondria (12, 19, 70). Although this enzyme can be targeted to mitochondria, it is distinct from the NAD+-dependent isocitrate dehydrogenase (Idh) that functions in the mitochondria as part of the Krebs cycle. However, similarly to Idh, Idp catalyzes the decarboxylation of isocitrate to α-ketoglutarate (29). This reaction can be performed in the mitochondria, in the cytosol, or in peroxisomes using isocitrate formed from citrate exported across the mitochondrial membrane. This allows for the production of NADPH in cellular compartments without reliance of active transport of NADPH across membranes (11). It is important to have reductive power produced directly within organelles for protection from exogenous as well as endogenous stressor. For example, NADPH is consumed in peroxisomes by enzymes such as catalase and uric acid oxidase, that counteract the ROS produced during breakdown of lipids (4, 5, 31). Mitochondria particularly require reductive capability, as these organelles are susceptible to endogenous ROS produced during cellular respiration and also to exogenous RNS (52). The proteins that make up the electron transport chain are prone to damage by nitric oxide, peroxynitrite, and S-nitrosothiols (6). Nitric oxide and peroxynitrite have been shown to cause irreversible damage to cytochrome c reductase, NADH dehydrogenase, and the succinate-ubiquinone complex; the common mechanism of damage is sequestration of iron/sulfur centers of the proteins (54, 69). Thus, without a means of detoxification, the mitochondrial membrane loses potential and the ability to continue respiration, leading to death of the stressed cell. In C. neoformans, some antioxidant enzymes that are located at the mitochondria and dependent on NADPH for function include catalases, superoxide dismutases, cytochrome c peroxidase, and flavohemoglobin denitrosylase (7, 24, 25, 26). These enzymes are important for stress resistance or virulence of C. neoformans due to their role in high-temperature growth (24, 25) or nitrosative stress resistance (10, 14, 26).In humans, there is one IDP gene that results in mitochondrial and peroxisomal products (22). In S. cerevisiae, there are three IDP genes, which encode mitochondrial (IDP1), cytosolic (IDP2), and peroxisomal (IDP3) forms of the protein. Deletion of both ZWF1 and any one of the IDP genes in S. cerevisiae results in sensitivity to oxidative stress, likely due to a substantial decrease in NADPH produced in these double deletion mutants (41). In C. neoformans there is one predicted IDP gene (IDP1). Microarray data have indicated that this gene is upregulated 2.5-fold during nitrosative stress and thus may have a role in resistance to this stressor (44).Since so many factors essential for stress resistance in C. neoformans utilize NADPH, we hypothesize that the sources of this cofactor are likewise critical for stress resistance. Although Zwf1 is important for adaptation to oxidative stress in the fungi S. cerevisiae and C. albicans, we had previously found that C. neoformans is unable to adapt to oxidative stress (S. M. Brown and J. K. Lodge, unpublished data), and thus we had reason to suspect that the role of Zwf1 in C. neoformans may be different than that in other organisms. The role of Idp1 in stress resistance, especially in resistance to nitrosative stress, is relatively unknown. In this study we used biochemical and genetic approaches to compare the roles of Zwf1 and Idp1 in resistance to oxidative and nitrosative stress in C. neoformans. We found that the Zwf1 is dispensable for viability, for resistance to oxidative and nitrosative stress, and for NADPH production. In contrast, we found that Idp1 is important for resistance to nitrosative stress, specifically for maintaining healthy mitochondria during exposure to nitrosative stress.  相似文献   

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Most microbes, including the fungal pathogen Cryptococcus neoformans, can grow as biofilms. Biofilms confer upon microbes a range of characteristics, including an ability to colonize materials such as shunts and catheters and increased resistance to antibiotics. Here, we provide evidence that coating surfaces with a monoclonal antibody to glucuronoxylomannan, the major component of the fungal capsular polysaccharide, immobilizes cryptococcal cells to a surface support and, subsequently, promotes biofilm formation. We used time-lapse microscopy to visualize the growth of cryptococcal biofilms, generating the first movies of fungal biofilm growth. We show that when fungal cells are immobilized using surface-attached specific antibody to the capsule, the initial stages of biofilm formation are significantly faster than those on surfaces with no antibody coating or surfaces coated with unspecific monoclonal antibody. Time-lapse microscopy revealed that biofilm growth was a dynamic process in which cells shuffled position during budding and was accompanied by emergence of planktonic variant cells that left the attached biofilm community. The planktonic variant cells exhibited mobility, presumably by Brownian motion. Our results indicate that microbial immobilization by antibody capture hastens biofilm formation and suggest that antibody coating of medical devices with immunoglobulins must exclude binding to common pathogenic microbes and the possibility that this effect could be exploited in industrial microbiology.Cryptococcus neoformans is a fungal pathogen that is ubiquitous in the environment and enters the body via the inhalation of airborne particles. The C. neoformans cell is surrounded by a layer of polysaccharide that consists predominantly of glucuronoxylomannan (GXM), which forms a protective capsule around the microbe. The capsule has been shown to be essential for virulence in murine models of infection (5-7) and, thus, is considered a key virulence factor. C. neoformans is the causative agent of cryptococcosis, a disease that primarily affects individuals with impaired immune systems, and is a significant problem in AIDS patients (21, 31). The most common manifestation of cryptococcosis is meningoencephalitis.Biofilms are communities of microbes that are attached to surfaces and held together by an extracellular matrix, often consisting predominantly of polysaccharides (8, 10). A great deal is known about bacterial biofilms (3, 9, 24, 30), but fungal biofilm formation is much less studied. Candida albicans is known to synthesize biofilms (11, 28, 29), as is C. neoformans. Biofilm-like structures consisting of innumerable cryptococcal cells encased in a polysaccharide matrix have been reported in human cases of cryptococcosis (32). Biofilm formation confers upon the microbe the capacity for drug resistance, and microbial cells in biofilms are less susceptible to host defense mechanisms (2, 4, 9, 12). In this regard, cells within C. neoformans biofilms are significantly less susceptible to caspofungin and amphotericin B than are planktonic cells (19). The cells within the biofilm are also resistant to the actions of fluconazole and voriconazole and various microbial oxidants and peptides (17, 19).Bacterial and fungal biofilms form readily on prosthetic materials, which poses a tremendous risk of chronic infection (10, 13, 15, 27). C. neoformans biofilms can form on a range of surfaces, including glass, polystyrene, and polyvinyl, and material devices, such as catheters (16). C. neoformans can form biofilms on the ventriculoatrial shunts used to decompress intracerebral pressure in patients with cryptococcal meningoencephalitis (32).The polysaccharide capsule of C. neoformans is essential for biofilm formation (18), and biofilm formation involves the shedding and accumulation of large amounts of GXM into the biofilm extracellular matrix (16). Previously, we reported that antibody to GXM in solution could inhibit biofilm formation through a process that presumably involves interference with polysaccharide shedding (18, 20). However, the effect of antibody-mediated immobilization of C. neoformans cells on cryptococcal biofilm formation has not been explored. In this paper, we report that the monoclonal antibody (MAb) 18B7, which is specific for the capsular polysaccharide GXM, can capture and immobilize C. neoformans to surfaces, a process that promotes biofilm formation. Interestingly, we identified planktonic variant C. neoformans cells that appeared to escape from the biofilm, but whose functions are not known. The results provide new insights on biofilm formation.  相似文献   

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Cryptococcus neoformans, an encapsulated, pathogenic yeast, is endowed with a variety of virulence factors, including a polysaccharide capsule. During mammalian infection, the outcome of the interaction between C. neoformans and macrophages is central to determining the fate of the host. Previous studies have shown similarities between the interaction of C. neoformans with macrophages and with amoebae, resulting in the proposal that fungal virulence for mammals originated from selection by amoeboid predators. In this study, we investigated the interaction of C. neoformans with the soil amoeba Acanthamoeba castellanii. Comparison of phagocytic efficiency of the wild type, nonencapsulated mutants, and complemented strains showed that the capsule was antiphagocytic for amoebae. Capsular enlargement was associated with a significant reduction in phagocytosis, suggesting that this phenomenon protects against ingestion by phagocytic predators. C. neoformans var. neoformans cells were observed to exit amoebae several hours after ingestion, in a process similar to the recently described nonlytic exocytosis from macrophages. Cryptococcal exocytosis from amoebae was dependent on the strain and on actin and required fungal viability. Additionally, the presence of a capsule was inversely correlated with the likelihood of extrusion in certain strains. In summary, nonlytic exocytosis from amoebae provide another parallel to observations in fungus-macrophage interactions. These results provide additional support for the notion that some mechanisms of virulence observed during mammalian infection originated, and were selected for, by environmental interactions.The encapsulated yeast Cryptococcus neoformans is an environmental organism that is capable of causing human disease. This fungus is a facultative intracellular pathogen with a unique pathogenic strategy, despite no obvious need for replication in an animal host as part of its life cycle (10). C. neoformans is known to interact with protozoa, some of which have been shown to be effective predators for this fungus (6, 26), and amoebae appear to be important for the control of C. neoformans in the environment (28). Previously, we reported that the interaction of C. neoformans with Acanthamoeba castellanii directly paralleled the interaction with human macrophages (33). Similarities between C. neoformans interactions with amoebae and macrophages included intracellular replication in a phagosome and the release of polysaccharide-containing vesicles into the cytoplasm (33). Furthermore, passage of avirulent C. neoformans and Histoplasma capsulatum through slime mold and amoebae was shown to increase virulence in mice (31, 32). On the basis of these observations, it was proposed that the capacity for mammalian virulence emerged from interactions with phagocytic predators, such as amoebae and slime mold, in the environment (7, 17, 30). Consequently, single-cell protists have emerged as important systems for the study of C. neoformans virulence, and subsequent studies have investigated the interaction of this fungus with slime mold and paramecia (9, 31). Additional evidence for this concept comes from studies of insect fungal pathogens, which suggest that the capacity for insect pathogenicity may follow preadaptation from interactions with amoebae in the environment (4). Understanding the mechanisms by which virulence emerges in environmental microbes is important considering that global warming has been hypothesized to bring about new fungal diseases in the coming century (13).Recent work in our laboratory and in that of Robin May simultaneously uncovered a novel strategy of avoiding macrophage killing whereby yeast cells were expulsed without lysis of the host cell (2, 19). The process is remarkable in that extrusion of the C. neoformans-filled phagosome is accompanied by the survival of both the host cells and the yeast cells. Phagosome extrusion or fungal exocytosis appears to be a C. neoformans-dictated event that is dependent on both the presence of the polysaccharide capsule and on the depolymerization of actin. A corollary of the hypothesis that C. neoformans virulence emerged from interactions with environmental predators is that phenomena observed with mammalian cells are likely to have a counterpart in free-living phagocytic cells. Consequently, the observation of an apparently unique event such as phagosomal extrusion from mammalian macrophages suggested a need to search for similar events in C. neoformans interactions with environmental phagocytic predators.In this study, we investigated parallels between the intracellular pathogenic strategy of C. neoformans in both macrophages and A. castellanii, focusing on characterizing the impact of the capsule on protozoan phagocytosis and on ascertaining whether fungal cells could also exit amoebae, including the role of the capsule in that possible mechanism. Using time-lapse microscopy, we observed the exocytosis of C. neoformans from A. castellanii. While there are significant differences in the nonlytic exocytosis process when comparing amoebae and macrophages, the observation of this phenomenon in amoebae provides additional support for the idea that the virulence of C. neoformans was selected for, and is maintained, by interactions in the environment with other soil organisms.(This research was conducted by Cara Chrisman in partial fulfillment of the requirements for a Ph.D. from the Sue Golding Graduate Division of Medical Science, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Yeshiva University, Bronx, NY [awarded in 2010].)  相似文献   

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Although several virulence factors and associated genes have been identified, the mechanisms that allow Cryptococcus neoformans to adapt during chronic infection and to persist in immunocompromised hosts remain poorly understood. Characterization of senescent cells of C. neoformans demonstrated that these cells exhibit a significantly enlarged cell body and capsule but still cross the blood-brain barrier. C. neoformans cells with advanced generational age are also more resistant to phagocytosis and killing by antifungals, which could promote their selection during chronic disease in humans. Senescent cells of RC-2, a C. neoformans strain that undergoes phenotypic switching, manifest switching rates up to 11-fold higher than those of younger cells. Infection experiments with labeled cells suggest that senescent yeast cells can potentially accumulate in vivo. Mathematical modeling incorporating different switching rates demonstrates how increased switching rates promote the emergence of hypervirulent mucoid variants during chronic infection. Our findings introduce the intriguing concept that senescence in eukaryotic pathogens could be a mechanism of microevolution that may promote pathoadaptation and facilitate evasion of an evolving immune response.Cryptococcus neoformans is an encapsulated yeast that causes chronic meningoencephalitis predominantly in patients with advanced human immunodeficiency virus infection. Worldwide, this disease is estimated to cause more than 600,000 deaths per year (22). This high death rate may result in part from the fact that this chronic infection is notoriously difficult to eradicate, despite effective antifungal therapy. Even in successfully treated patients with access to antiretroviral therapy, the organism persists and can cause relapse both before and after the start of highly active antiretroviral treatment.In murine infection models, C. neoformans strain RC-2 can augment virulence by undergoing phenotypic switching from a smooth (SM) parent colony to a more virulent mucoid (MC) colony variant (6). Phenotypic switching occurs in both species and varieties of this fungus (6, 8, 11). Although differentially regulated genes associated with switching have been described (10), the precise molecular mechanism that controls phenotypic switching in C. neoformans is unknown. In vitro investigations have demonstrated that phenotypic switching occurs at a stable rate and MC switch variants spontaneously arise at a rate of 1 in about 20,000 plated SM colonies. Environmental signals that induce or alter this process have not been identified to date. Phenotypic switching occurs during chronic murine infection and alters the outcome (6), but it is noteworthy that MC switch variants consistently emerge late in the course of infection (after 6 weeks), although the fungal burden is highest on day 14 after intratracheal (i.t.) infection. This could reflect altering selection pressure by an evolving host response or, alternatively, a change in the microbe''s propensity to undergo phenotypic switching over time. In Candida albicans, the process of phenotypic switching is controlled by pathways that are involved in silencing and maintenance of genomic stability (14, 20, 34, 35). Furthermore, in the context of research on aging in Saccharomyces cerevisiae, it has become evident that senescent yeast cells (old cells with advanced generational age) exhibit less genomic stability (17, 18). C. neoformans is also a unicellular haploid yeast that replicates clonally in vivo. Consequently, we reasoned that it was conceivable that replicative aging of C. neoformans during chronic infection could alter genomic stability and its propensity to undergo phenotypic switching. We therefore investigated the effect of generational aging on phenotypic switching in C. neoformans and also compared it to C. albicans.  相似文献   

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The fungal pathogen Candida albicans produces dark-pigmented melanin after 3 to 4 days of incubation in medium containing l-3,4-dihydroxyphenylalanine (l-DOPA) as a substrate. Expression profiling of C. albicans revealed very few genes significantly up- or downregulated by growth in l-DOPA. We were unable to determine a possible role for melanin in the virulence of C. albicans. However, we showed that melanin was externalized from the fungal cells in the form of electron-dense melanosomes that were free or often loosely bound to the cell wall exterior. Melanin production was boosted by the addition of N-acetylglucosamine to the medium, indicating a possible association between melanin production and chitin synthesis. Melanin externalization was blocked in a mutant specifically disrupted in the chitin synthase-encoding gene CHS2. Melanosomes remained within the outermost cell wall layers in chs3Δ and chs2Δ chs3Δ mutants but were fully externalized in chs8Δ and chs2Δ chs8Δ mutants. All the CHS mutants synthesized dark pigment at equivalent rates from mixed membrane fractions in vitro, suggesting it was the form of chitin structure produced by the enzymes, not the enzymes themselves, that was involved in the melanin externalization process. Mutants with single and double disruptions of the chitinase genes CHT2 and CHT3 and the chitin pathway regulator ECM33 also showed impaired melanin externalization. We hypothesize that the chitin product of Chs3 forms a scaffold essential for normal externalization of melanosomes, while the Chs8 chitin product, probably produced in cell walls in greater quantity in the absence of CHS2, impedes externalization.Candida albicans is a major opportunistic fungal human pathogen that causes a wide variety of infections (9, 68). In healthy individuals C. albicans resides as a commensal within the oral cavity and gastrointestinal and urogenital tracts. However, in immunocompromised hosts, C. albicans causes infections ranging in severity from mucocutaneous infections to life-threatening disseminated diseases (9, 68). Research into the pathogenicity of C. albicans has revealed a complex mix of putative virulence factors (7, 60), perhaps reflecting the fine balance this species strikes between commensal colonization and opportunistic invasion of the human host.Melanins are biological pigments, typically dark brown or black, formed by the oxidative polymerization of phenolic compounds. They are negatively charged hydrophobic molecules with high molecular weights and are insoluble in both aqueous and organic solvents. Their insolubility makes melanins difficult to study, and no definitive structure has yet been found for them; they probably represent an amorphous mixture of polymers (35). There are various types of melanin in nature, including eumelanin and phaeomelanin (76). Two principal types of melanin are found in the fungal kingdom. The majority are 1.8-dihydroxynapthalene (DNH) melanins synthesized from acetyl-coenzyme A (CoA) via the polyketide pathway (5). DNH melanins have been found in a wide range of opportunistic fungal pathogens of humans, including dark (dematiaceous) molds, such as Cladosporium, Fonsecaea, Phialophora, and Wangiella species, and as conidial pigments in Aspergillus fumigatus and Aspergillus niger (41, 80, 87, 88). However, several other fungal pathogens, including Blastomyces dermatitidis, Coccidioides posadasii, Cryptococcus neoformans, Histoplasma capsulatum, Paracoccidioides brasiliensis, and Sporothrix schenckii, produce eumelanin (3,4-dihydroxyphenylalanine [DOPA]-melanin) through the activity of a polyphenol oxidase (laccase) and require an exogenous o-diphenolic or p-diphenolic substrate, such as l-DOPA (16, 30, 63,65, 67, 79).The production of melanin in humans and other mammals is a function of specialized cells called melanocytes. Particles of melanin polymers, sometimes, including more than one melanin type, are built up within membrane-bound organelles called melanosomes (76), and these are actively transported along microtubules to the tips of dendritic outgrowths of melanocytes, from where they are transferred to neighboring cells (32, 81). The mechanism of intercellular transfer of melanosomes has not yet been established, but the export process probably involves the fusion of cell and vesicular membranes rather than secretion of naked melanin (82). In pathogenic fungi, melanins are often reported to be associated with or “in” the cell wall (35, 36, 50, 72, 79). However, there is variation between species: the melanin may be located external to the wall, e.g., in P. brasiliensis (79); within the wall itself (reviewed in reference 42); or as a layer internal to the wall and external to the cell membrane, e.g., in C. neoformans (22, 45, 85). However, mutants of C. neoformans bearing disruptions of three CDA genes involved in the biosynthesis of cell wall chitosan, or of CHS3, encoding a chitin synthase, or of CSR2, which probably regulates Chs3, all released melanin into the culture supernatant, suggesting a role for chitin or chitosan in retaining the pigment polymer in its normal intracellular location (3, 4). However, vesicles externalized from C. neoformans cells also show laccase activity (21), so the effect of chitin may be on vesicle externalization rather than on melanin itself. Internal structures compatible with mammalian melanosomes have been observed in Cladosporium carrionii (73) and in Fonsecaea pedrosoi (2, 26). Remarkably, F. pedrosoi also secretes melanin and locates the polymer within the cell wall (1, 2, 25, 27, 74).Melanization has been found to play an important role in the virulence of several human fungal pathogens, such as C. neoformans, A. fumigatus, P. brasiliensis, S. schenckii, H. capsulatum, B. dermatitidis, and C. posadasii (among recent reviews are references 29, 42, 62, 74, and 79). From these and earlier reviews of the extensive literature, melanin has been postulated to be involved in a range of virulence-associated properties, including interactions with host cells; protection against oxidative stresses, UV light, and hydrolytic enzymes; resistance to antifungal agents; iron-binding activities; and even the harnessing of ionizing radiation in contaminated soils (15). The most extensively studied fungal pathogen for the role of melanization is C. neoformans, which possesses two genes, LAC1 and LAC2, encoding melanin-synthesizing laccases (52, 69, 90). It has been known since early studies with naturally occurring albino variants of C. neoformans (39) that melanin-deficient strains are attenuated in mouse models of cryptococcosis. Deletion of both the LAC1 and LAC2 genes reduced survival of C. neoformans in macrophages (52), and a study based on otherwise isogenic LAC1+ and LAC1 strains confirmed the importance of LAC1 in experimental virulence (66). Other genes in the regulatory pathway for LAC1 are similarly known to be essential to virulence (12, 84).C. albicans has been shown to produce melanin with DOPA as a substrate for production of the polymer (53). The cells could be treated with hot acids to produce typical melanin “ghosts,” and antibodies specific for melanin reacted with the fungal cells by immunohistochemistry with tissues from experimentally infected mice, demonstrating that C. albicans produces melanin in vivo (53). However, no candidate genes encoding laccases have yet been identified in the C. albicans genome (http://www.candidagenome.org/). In this study, we investigated the production of melanin by C. albicans and showed that its normal externalization from wild-type cells, including formation of melanosomes, can be altered to an intracellular and intrawall location by mutation of genes involved in chitin synthesis. C. albicans has four genes encoding chitin synthase enzymes. CHS1 is an essential gene under normal conditions (59), and its product is the main enzyme involved in septum formation (83). Chs3 forms the bulk of the chitin in the cell wall and the chitinous ring at sites of bud emergence (8, 51, 57), while Chs2 contributes to differential chitin levels found between yeast and hyphal forms of the fungus, and Chs8 influences the architecture of chitin microfibrils (43, 51, 55, 57, 58). We found that melanin externalization was unaffected in a chs8Δ mutant but was reduced or abrogated in chs2Δ and chs3Δ mutants. Expression profiles of melanin-producing cells grown in the presence of l-DOPA did not identify any potential laccase-synthesizing genes.  相似文献   

17.
During the extreme polarized growth of fungal hyphae, secretory vesicles are thought to accumulate in a subapical region called the Spitzenkörper. The human fungal pathogen Candida albicans can grow in a budding yeast or hyphal form. When it grows as hyphae, Mlc1 accumulates in a subapical spot suggestive of a Spitzenkörper-like structure, while the polarisome components Spa2 and Bud6 localize to a surface crescent. Here we show that the vesicle-associated protein Sec4 also localizes to a spot, confirming that secretory vesicles accumulate in the putative C. albicans Spitzenkörper. In contrast, exocyst components localize to a surface crescent. Using a combination of fluorescence recovery after photobleaching (FRAP) and fluorescence loss in photobleaching (FLIP) experiments and cytochalasin A to disrupt actin cables, we showed that Spitzenkörper-located proteins are highly dynamic. In contrast, exocyst and polarisome components are stably located at the cell surface. It is thought that in Saccharomyces cerevisiae exocyst components are transported to the cell surface on secretory vesicles along actin cables. If each vesicle carried its own complement of exocyst components, then it would be expected that exocyst components would be as dynamic as Sec4 and would have the same pattern of localization. This is not what we observe in C. albicans. We propose a model in which a stream of vesicles arrives at the tip and accumulates in the Spitzenkörper before onward delivery to the plasma membrane mediated by exocyst and polarisome components that are more stable residents of the cell surface.Polarized growth of fungi requires that a supply of secretory vesicles is delivered along cytoskeletal tracks to the site of cell expansion (for reviews, see references 13, 29, 30, and 31). Fusion of these membrane-bound vesicles with the plasma membrane allows the necessary expansion of the plasma membrane and releases the enzymes and raw materials for the synthesis of new cell wall material and the remodeling necessary to allow this newly synthesized material to be inserted into the existing cell wall. The process of polarized growth has been extensively studied in the budding yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae and provides a model for studying the process in other fungi (for a review, see reference 20). Post-Golgi vesicles travel to sites of polarized growth along actin cables (23). Actin cables are nucleated at sites of polarized growth by the formin Bni1 facilitated by a multiprotein complex called the polarisome, which consists of Spa2, Bud6, and Pea1(5, 22, 24, 27). The motive force for vesicle transport is provided by Myo2, a class V myosin, complexed to its regulatory light chain Mlc1 (22, 26). At the plasma membrane, secretory vesicles dock with a second multiprotein complex called the exocyst before fusion with the plasma membrane (14, 15, 32, 33), mediated by v-SNARES on the vesicle and t-SNARES on the membrane. The exocyst is an octomeric complex composed of Sec3, Sec5, Sec6, Sec8, Sec10, Sec15, Exo70, and Exo84 (21). It is thought that Sec3 and a fraction of the Exo70 pool are localized at sites of polarized growth independently of the actin cytoskeleton (3, 6). The other exocyst subunits and the remainder of the Exo70 pool are thought to be transported to sites of polarized growth on secretory vesicles, where together with Sec3 and Exo70 they form the exocyst complex (3). Secretory vesicles exit the Golgi apparatus, travel toward sites of polarized growth, and dock with the exocyst by use of the Rab-type GTPase Sec4 in its GTP-bound form, which is activated by its GEF, Sec2 (12, 19, 35, 36). In the S. cerevisiae cell cycle, polarized growth is initially directed toward the bud tip in young buds (17). Growth subsequently becomes isotropic in larger buds before being directed toward the mother bud neck during cytokinesis at the end of the cell cycle. Accordingly, polarisome and exocyst components localize to the tips of young buds (7, 27, 28).The rate of hyphal tip extension is much greater than that of the growth of a yeast or pseudohyphal bud. In rich yeast extract-peptone-dextrose (YEPD) medium, Candida albicans hyphae extend at the rate of 0.25 μm min−1, compared to 0.0625 μm min−1 in yeast buds and 0.125 μm min−1 in pseudohyphal cells (P. Sudbery unpublished observations). In hyphae of filamentous fungi, a structure called a Spitzenkörper is present at the tip, which is rich in secretory vesicles (8, 9, 11, 29, 34). It is believed that the Spitzenkörper acts as a vesicle supply center (VSC) (1). This model proposes that the Spitzenkörper is maintained at a fixed distance from the hyphal tip. Vesicles radiate out in equal directions to fuse with the plasma membrane, so that more vesicles per unit area fuse with the hyphal tip itself than with other parts of the hyphae. Mathematical modeling shows that this explains the distinctive shape of hyphal tips.In order to investigate the mechanism of polarized growth in the hyphae of Candida albicans, we previously determined the localization of Mlc1-yellow fluorescent protein (YFP) and the polarisome components Bud6-YFP and Spa2-YFP (4). We found that in hyphae, polarisome components localized to a surface crescent, as they did in young yeast buds and the tips of elongated pseudohyphal buds. However, in hyphae Mlc1-YFP localized to a bright spot, which at least in some hyphae was clearly inside the tip, rather than at the surface, and which appeared spherical in three-dimensional reconstructions. We concluded that this represented a Spitzenkörper. In some hyphae Mlc1-YFP also localized to a surface crescent, similar to the pattern displayed by polarisome components. This observation suggested that the Spitzenkörper and polarisome were separate structures, both of which were present at hyphal tips, but that only the polarisome was present at the bud tips of pseudohyphae and yeast. Moreover, the dual localization of Mlc1-YFP to a crescent and a spot suggested that Mlc1 may be present in both structures.While S. cerevisiae has proved to be an excellent model to investigate the molecular genetics of polarized growth, it is less optimal to study the spatial organization of the molecular components because polarized growth of the bud is restricted to a short period after bud emergence when the nascent bud is small. Thus, there has been little effort to investigate the fine detail of the spatial organization of the different components of the polarization machinery beyond noting that they localize to sites of polarized growth. In this study we exploited the opportunities afforded by the continuous polarized growth of C. albicans hyphae to clarify the relationship between the Spitzenkörper, polarisome, and exocyst, which cooperate to mediate the extreme polarized growth of hyphae. We show that the vesicle-associated marker Sec4 also localizes to a Spitzenkörper-like structure, confirming the existence of a vesicle-rich area corresponding to a Spitzenkörper at the hyphal tip. We show that exocyst components such as Sec3, Sec6, Sec8, Exo70, and Exo84 localize to a surface crescent, so the exocyst, like the polarisome, is also a spatially separate structure from the Spitzenkörper. We used three independent strategies to investigate the dynamic properties of these structures. Fluorescence recovery after photobleaching (FRAP) was used to measure the rate at which new proteins arrived at the tip. Fluorescence loss in photobleaching (FLIP) was used to measure the rate at which proteins exited the tip. Cytochalasin A was used to disrupt actin cables, allowing the persistence of proteins at the tip to be measured after the supply of new proteins was blocked. In each case we found that Spitzenkörper components Sec4, Sec2, and Mlc1 were highly dynamic, while the polarisome component Spa2 was stable. Intriguingly, exocyst components showed intermediate dynamic properties, suggesting that they are delivered to the tip on vesicles but that not all vesicles carry a complement of exocyst components. We suggest that these data are consistent with a model in which a stream of vesicles arrives at the tip and accumulates in the Spitzenkörper before onward delivery to the plasma membrane mediated by exocyst and polarisome components that are more stable residents of the cell surface.  相似文献   

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