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1.
Partial sequence analysis of the Cryptococcus neoformans MATalpha mating type locus revealed the presence of a gene with substantial sequence similarity to other fungal mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase kinase kinase (MAPKKK) genes. The C. neoformans gene, designated STE11alpha, showed the highest degree of similarity to the Neurospora crassa nrc-1, Schizosaccharomyces pombe byr2 and Saccharomyces cerevisiae STE11 genes. A polymerase chain reaction-mediated sib-selection technique was successfully adapted for the purpose of disrupting STE11alpha. C. neoformans ste11alphaDelta mutants were found to be sterile, consistent with the phenotypes of ste11 and byr2 mutants in S. cerevisiae and S. pombe respectively. Haploid ste11alphaDelta mutants were also found to be unable to produce hyphae, suggesting that the C. neoformans gene is functionally conserved when compared with its S. cerevisiae MAPKKK counterpart. Comparison of the wild-type STE11alpha strain with a ste11alphaDelta disruptant for virulence using the mouse model showed that the ste11alphaDelta strain was less virulent, but the difference was only minor. In spite of some of the conserved functions of STE11alpha, linkage analysis showed that STE11alpha is only found in mating type alpha strains. These results demonstrate that, although functionally conserved, the mating pathway in C. neoformans has a unique organization.  相似文献   

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The stress-activated p38/Hog1 mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) pathway is structurally conserved in many diverse organisms, including fungi and mammals, and modulates myriad cellular functions. The Hog1 pathway is uniquely specialized to control differentiation and virulence factors in a majority of clinical Cryptococcus neoformans serotype A and D strains. Here, we identified and characterized the Ssk2 MAPKKK that functions upstream of the MAPKK Pbs2 and the MAPK Hog1 in C. neoformans. The SSK2 gene was identified as a potential component responsible for the difference in Hog1 phosphorylation between the serotype D f1 sibling strains B-3501 and B-3502 through comparative analysis of meiotic maps showing their meiotic segregation patterns of Hog1-dependent sensitivity to the antifungal drug fludioxonil. Ssk2 is the only component of the Hog1 MAPK cascade that is polymorphic between the two strains, and the B-3501 and B-3502 SSK2 alleles were distinguished by two coding sequence changes. Supporting this finding, SSK2 allele exchange completely interchanged the Hog1-controlled signaling patterns, related phenotypes, and virulence levels of strains B-3501 and JEC21. In the serotype A strain H99, disruption of the SSK2 gene enhanced capsule and melanin biosynthesis and mating efficiency, similar to pbs2 and hog1 mutations. Furthermore, ssk2Δ, pbs2Δ, and hog1Δ mutants were hypersensitive to a variety of stresses and resistant to fludioxonil. In agreement with these results, Hog1 phosphorylation was abolished in the ssk2Δ mutant, similar to what occurred in the pbs2Δ mutant. Taken together, these findings indicate that Ssk2 is a critical interface connecting the two-component system and the Pbs2-Hog1 MAPK pathway in C. neoformans.  相似文献   

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Mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) was originally identified as a serine/threonine protein kinase that is rapidly activated in response to various growth factors and tumor promoters in mammalian cultured cells. The kinase cascade including MAPK and its direct activator, MAPK kinase (MAPKK), is now believed to transmit various extracellular signals into their intracellular targets in eukaryotic cells. It has been reported that activation of MAPKK and MAPK occurs during the meiotic maturation of oocytes in several species, including Xenopus laevis . Studies with neutralizing antibodies against MAPKK, MAPK phosphatases and constitutively active MAPKK or MAPK have revealed a crucial role of the MAPKK/MAPK cascade in a number of developmental processes in Xenopus oocytes and embryos.  相似文献   

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Gene duplication and divergence via both the loss and gain of gene activities are powerful evolutionary forces underlying the origin of new biological functions. Here a comparative genetics approach was applied to examine the roles of protein kinase A (PKA) catalytic subunits in three closely related varieties or sibling species of the pathogenic fungus genus Cryptococcus. Previous studies revealed that two PKA catalytic subunits, Pka1 and Pka2, control virulence factor production and mating. However, only one of the two plays the predominant physiological role, and this function has been exchanged between Pka1 and Pka2 in strains of the Cryptococcus neoformans var. grubii serotype A lineage compared to divergent C. neoformans var. neoformans serotype D isolates. To understand the basis for this functional plasticity, here the activities of Pka1 and Pka2 were defined in the two varieties and the related sibling species Cryptococcus gattii by gene disruption and characterization, heterologous complementation, and analysis of serotype AD hybrid mutant strains. The findings provide evidence for a shared ancestral role of PKA in governing mating and virulence factor production and indicate that the exchange of catalytic subunit roles is attributable to loss of function. Our studies illustrate the plasticity of signaling networks enabling rapid rewiring during speciation of a clade of common human fungal pathogens.  相似文献   

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Sex serves a pivotal role in genetic exchange and it contributes to the fitness and genetic diversity for eukaryotic populations. Although the importance of the canonical bisexual mating has been widely accepted, the significance of the evolution and maintenance of unisexual mating observed in some eukaryotes is unclear. The recent discovery of same-sex mating in the human fungal pathogen Cryptococcus neoformans and the revelation of its impact on the Cryptococcus global population structure provide a platform to elucidate the molecular mechanisms and significance of unisexual mating. Here, we review the evidence of unisexual mating in Cryptococcus and provide some perspective on the biological significance of this life style on the survival of this important fungal pathogen in the environment and in animal hosts. We also summarize our current understanding of the molecular mechanisms governing this unconventional mode of reproduction.  相似文献   

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The evolutionarily conserved cyclic AMP (cAMP) signaling pathway controls cell functions in response to environmental cues in organisms as diverse as yeast and mammals. In the basidiomycetous human pathogenic fungus Cryptococcus neoformans, the cAMP pathway governs virulence and morphological differentiation. Here we identified and characterized adenylyl cyclase-associated protein, Aca1, which functions in parallel with the Galpha subunit Gpa1 to control the adenylyl cyclase (Cac1). Aca1 interacted with the C terminus of Cac1 in the yeast two-hybrid system. By molecular and genetic approaches, Aca1 was shown to play a critical role in mating by regulating cell fusion and filamentous growth in a cAMP-dependent manner. Aca1 also regulates melanin and capsule production via the Cac1-cAMP-protein kinase A pathway. Genetic epistasis studies support models in which Aca1 and Gpa1 are necessary and sufficient components that cooperate to activate adenylyl cyclase. Taken together, these studies further define the cAMP signaling cascade controlling virulence of this ubiquitous human fungal pathogen.  相似文献   

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The basidiomycetous yeast Cryptococcus neoformans infects humans and causes a meningoencephalitis that is uniformly fatal if untreated. The organism has a defined sexual cycle involving mating of haploid MATa and MATalpha strains, gene disruption by transformation and homologous recombination is now readily accomplished, and robust animal models for infection have been well established. In addition, a pair of congenic MATalpha and MATa haploid strains have been constructed that permit detailed studies on physiology and virulence by classical genetic approaches. These strains represent a valuable resource for further studies in this organism, and the genomic sequence of one of these strains, JEC21 (=B-4500), was recently chosen to be sequenced by an international consortium. Because of the importance of these strains for genetic studies in C. neoformans and the fact that the genomic sequence of one of these strains is in progress, we review here how these congenic strains were originally constructed.  相似文献   

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Cryptococcus neoformans is an opportunistic fungal pathogen that infects the human central nervous system. This pathogen elaborates two specialized virulence factors: the antioxidant melanin and an antiphagocytic immunosuppressive polysaccharide capsule. A signaling cascade controlling mating and virulence was identified. The PKA1 gene encoding the major cyclic AMP (cAMP)-dependent protein kinase catalytic subunit was identified and disrupted. pka1 mutant strains were sterile, failed to produce melanin or capsule, and were avirulent. The PKR1 gene encoding the protein kinase A (PKA) regulatory subunit was also identified and disrupted. pkr1 mutant strains overproduced capsule and were hypervirulent in animal models of cryptococcosis. pkr1 pka1 double mutant strains exhibited phenotypes similar to that of pka1 mutants, providing epistasis evidence that the Pka1 catalytic subunit functions downstream of the Pkr1 regulatory subunit. The PKA pathway was also shown to function downstream of the Galpha protein Gpa1 and to regulate cAMP production by feedback inhibition. These findings define a Galpha protein-cAMP-PKA signaling pathway regulating differentiation and virulence of a human fungal pathogen.  相似文献   

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Evolvability is a function of the way genetic variation interacts with the mechanisms that produce the phenotype. We explore an explicitly mechanistic way of studying the evolvability of phenotypes that are produced by a relatively simple genetic mechanism, the mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) cascade. We developed a quantitative model of MAPK activation that can be used to study the effects of genetic variation on the various components of this signaling cascade. We show how some standard tools of applied mathematics, such as steady-state formulations and nondimensionalization, can be used to elucidate the relative importance of variation in each gene of this mechanism. We also give insights into non-intuitive patterns of dependence and trade-off among the genes. The mechanism produces several different phenotypes (ultrasensitivity to stimulation, switch-like behavior, amount of MAPK-PP delivered, persistence of MAPK-PP activity), each of which is sensitive to different (but partially overlapping) combinations of genes. We show that the mechanism imposes clear limitations on the evolvability of each of the different phenotypes of the pathway, even in the presence of genetic variation in the components of the mechanism. This approach to the study of evolvability is generally applicable and complements the traditional approach through statistical genetics by providing a mechanistic understanding of the genetic interactions that produce the phenotype.  相似文献   

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G-protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) typically activate c-Jun N-terminal kinase (JNK) through the G protein betagamma subunit (Gbetagamma), in a manner dependent on Rho family small GTPases, in mammalian cells. Here we show that JNK activation by the prototypic Gq-coupled alpha1B-adrenergic receptor is mediated by the alpha subunit of Gq (Galphaq), not by Gbetagamma, using a transient transfection system in human embryonic kidney cells. JNK activation by the alpha1B-adrenergic receptor/Galphaq was selectively mediated by mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase 4 (MKK4), but not MKK7. Also, MKK4 activation by the alpha1B-adrenergic receptor/Galphaq required c-Src and Rho family small GTPases. Furthermore, activation of the alpha1B-adrenergic receptor stimulated JNK activity through Src family tyrosine kinases and Rho family small GTPases in hamster smooth muscle cells that natively express the alpha1B-adrenergic receptor. Together, these results suggest that the alpha1B-adrenergic receptor/Galphaq may up-regulate JNK activity through a MKK4 pathway dependent on c-Src and Rho family small GTPases in mammalian cells.  相似文献   

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Fox DS  Heitman J 《Eukaryotic cell》2005,4(9):1526-1538
Mating and virulence of the human fungal pathogen Cryptococcus neoformans are controlled by calcineurin, a serine-threonine-specific calcium-activated phosphatase that is the target of the immunosuppressive drugs cyclosporine A and FK506. In previous studies, a calcineurin binding protein (Cbp1, Rcn1, Dscr1/Csp1-3/MCIP1-3) that is conserved from yeasts to humans has been identified, but whether this protein functions to regulate calcineurin activity or facilitate calcineurin function as a signaling effector has been unclear. Here we show that, like calcineurin, Cbp1 is required for mating in C. neoformans. By contrast, Cbp1 plays no role in promoting calcineurin-dependent growth at 37 degrees C and is not essential for haploid fruiting. Site-directed mutagenesis studies provide evidence that tandem phosphorylation and dephosphorylation of two serine residues in the conserved SP repeat motif are critical for Cbp1 function. Epistasis analysis supports models in which Cbp1 functions coordinately with calcineurin to direct hyphal elongation during mating. Taken together, these findings provide insights into the roles of Cbp1 as an accessory subunit or effector of calcineurin-specific signaling pathways, which may be features conserved among the calcipressins to govern calcineurin signaling in immune cells, cardiomyocytes, and neurons of multicellular eukaryotes.  相似文献   

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