Reset filters

Search publications


By keyword
By department

No publications found.

 

Signal-mediated localization of Candida albicans pheromone response pathway components

Authors: Costa ACBPOmran RPLaw CDumeaux VWhiteway M


Affiliations

1 Department of Biology, Concordia University, Montreal, Canada.
2 Centre for Microscopy and Cellular Imaging, Concordia University, Montreal, Canada.
3 PERFORM Centre, Concordia University, Montreal, Canada.

Description

Candida albicans opaque cells release pheromones to stimulate cells of opposite mating type to activate their pheromone response pathway. Although this fungal pathogen shares orthologous proteins involved in the process with Saccharomyces cerevisiae, the pathway in each organism has unique characteristics. We have used GFP-tagged fusion proteins to investigate the localization of the scaffold protein Cst5, as well as the MAP kinases Cek1 and Cek2, during pheromone response in C. albicans. In wild-type cells, pheromone treatment directed Cst5-GFP to surface puncta concentrated at the tips of mating projections. These puncta failed to form in cells defective in either the Ga or ß subunits. However, they still formed in response to pheromone in cells missing Ste11, but with the puncta distributed around the cell periphery in the absence of mating projections. These puncta were absent from hst7?/? cells, but could be detected in the ste11?/? hst7?/? double mutant. Cek2-GFP showed a strong nuclear localization late in the response, consistent with a role in adaptation, while Cek1-GFP showed a weaker, but early increase in nuclear localization after pheromone treatment. Activation loop phosphorylation of both Cek1 and Cek2 required the presence of Ste11. In contrast to Cek2-GFP, which showed no localization signal in ste11?/? cells, Cek1-GFP showed enhanced nuclear localization that was pheromone independent in the ste11?/? mutant. The results are consistent with CaSte11 facilitating Hst7-mediated MAP kinase phosphorylation and also playing a potentially critical role in both MAP kinase and Cst5 scaffold localization.


Keywords: Candida albicansMAP kinasesmatingopaque cellspheromone response pathway


Links

PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/33793759/

DOI: 10.1093/g3journal/jkaa033