Roles of the Candida albicansMitogen-Activated Protein Kinase Homolog, Cek1p, in Hyphal Development and Systemic Candidiasis
C Csank, K Schröppel, E Leberer, D Harcus… - Infection and …, 1998 - Am Soc Microbiol
Infection and immunity, 1998•Am Soc Microbiol
Extracellular signal-regulated protein kinase (ERK, or mitogen-activated protein kinase
[MAPK]) regulatory cascades in fungi turn on transcription factors that control developmental
processes, stress responses, and cell wall integrity. CEK1 encodes a Candida albicans
MAPK homolog (Cek1p), isolated by its ability to interfere with the Saccharomyces
cerevisiae MAPK mating pathway. C. albicans cells with a deletion of the CEK1 gene are
defective in shifting from a unicellular budding colonial growth mode to an agar-invasive …
[MAPK]) regulatory cascades in fungi turn on transcription factors that control developmental
processes, stress responses, and cell wall integrity. CEK1 encodes a Candida albicans
MAPK homolog (Cek1p), isolated by its ability to interfere with the Saccharomyces
cerevisiae MAPK mating pathway. C. albicans cells with a deletion of the CEK1 gene are
defective in shifting from a unicellular budding colonial growth mode to an agar-invasive …
Abstract
Extracellular signal-regulated protein kinase (ERK, or mitogen-activated protein kinase [MAPK]) regulatory cascades in fungi turn on transcription factors that control developmental processes, stress responses, and cell wall integrity. CEK1 encodes aCandida albicans MAPK homolog (Cek1p), isolated by its ability to interfere with the Saccharomyces cerevisiae MAPK mating pathway. C. albicans cells with a deletion of theCEK1 gene are defective in shifting from a unicellular budding colonial growth mode to an agar-invasive hyphal growth mode when nutrients become limiting on solid medium with mannitol as a carbon source or on glucose when nitrogen is severely limited. The same phenotype is seen in C. albicans mutants in which the homologs (CST20, HST7, and CPH1) of the S. cerevisiae STE20, STE7, andSTE12 genes are disrupted. In S. cerevisiae, the products of these genes function as part of a MAPK cascade required for mating and invasiveness of haploid cells and for pseudohyphal development of diploid cells. Epistasis studies revealed that theC. albicans CST20, HST7, CEK1, andCPH1 gene products lie in an equivalent, canonical, MAPK cascade. While Cek1p acts as part of the MAPK cascade involved in starvation-specific hyphal development, it may also play independent roles in C. albicans. In contrast to disruptions of theHST7 and CPH1 genes, disruption of theCEK1 gene adversely affects the growth of serum-induced mycelial colonies and attenuates virulence in a mouse model for systemic candidiasis.