Publication | Open Access
Hemoglobin Regulates Expression of an Activator of Mating-Type Locus α Genes in <i>Candida albicans</i>
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Citations
51
References
2004
Year
BiologyMtla1 Gene ExpressionFungal Cell BiologyCandida AlbicansGeneticsMedicineNatural SciencesGenetic MechanismYeastFungal PhysiologyMolecular GeneticsGenetic VariationGenomicsGene ExpressionMtlalpha Gene ExpressionHemoglobin Regulates ExpressionMtl LocusFungal Reproduction
Phenotypic switching from the white to the opaque phase is a necessary step for mating in the pathogenic fungus Candida albicans. Suppressing switching during vascular dissemination of the organism may be advantageous, because opaque cells are more susceptible to host defenses. A repressor of white-opaque switching, HBR1 (hemoglobin response gene 1), was identified based on its specific induction following growth in the presence of exogenous hemoglobin. Deletion of a single HBR1 allele allowed opaque phase switching and mating competence, accompanied by a lack of detectable MTL alpha1 and alpha2 gene expression and enhanced MTLa1 gene expression. Conversely, overexpression of Hbr1p or exposure to hemoglobin increased MTLalpha gene expression. The a1/alpha2 repressed target gene CAG1 was derepressed in the same mutant in a hemoglobin-sensitive manner. Regulation of CAG1 by hemoglobin required an intact MTLa1 gene. Several additional Mtlp targets were perturbed in HBR1 mutants in a manner consistent with commitment to an a mating phenotype, including YEL007w, MFalpha, HST6, and RAM2. Therefore, Hbr1 is part of a host factor-regulated signaling pathway that controls white-opaque switching and mating in the absence of allelic deletion at the MTL locus.
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