Title: Cell cycle and Morphology Transition
1Cell cycle and Morphology Transition
2Cell shape
- Candida can grow in a variety of morphological
forms - Yeast -unicellular budding
- True hyphae - parallel-sided walls
- Pseudohyphae - daughter bud elongation and
remaining attached to the mother cell - The ability to switch between morphologies is
necessary for virulence
3- Hyphae and pseudohyphae are invasive - could
promote tissue penetration, colonization of
organs - Yeast form might be more suited for dissemination
4The effect of environmental conditions on
morphology
5Signal transduction pathways govern morphology
transition
- cAMP protein kinase A pathway
- Mitogen activated protein kinase pathway
- pH response Rim101 pathway
- Solid matrix related Czf1 pathway
- Negative regulators -Tup1 Nrg1, Rpg1
6Colony switching white-opaque switching
- Epigenetic phenomenon
- Colony
- Yeast cells form smooth white dome-shaped
colonies, oval shape yeast cells - Opaque cells form opaque flat colonies,
elongated oblong shape, twice the size of white
cells, competent to undergo mating
7- Only cells with homozygous mating type locus form
opaque cells - Opaque cells signal white cells to form a a
biofilm - facilitates mating between opaque cells.
8Cell cycle
- Cell cycle is regulated in a different way in
each cell type - The subcellular components are rearranged/localize
d differentially during the cell cycle - Actin patch
- Actin cable
- Septin ring
- Septum
- Nucleus
9Actin patch/cable
- Core components of actin cytoskeleton
- Critical for establishment of cell polarity
- Actin cables bundles of actin that align along
the axis of polarization - Actin patches cortical membrane zones invested
with F-actin and actin binding/regulating
proteins - Actin patches are enriched at sites of polarized
cell surface growth
10Septin
- septin ring forms during cell division
- septin ring serves as a "dock" and proteins bind
to it in an asymmetrical fashion - Known functions
- Scaffold recruit other proteins
- Cytokinesis septum formation
- Anchoring site for bud site selection factors
11Septum
- Cross wall between mother and daughter cell
- Prevent lysis during separation of the two cells
- Chitin ring
- Contractile actomyosin ring, invagination of the
plasma membrane - Chitin disk formed (primary septum)
- Secondary septum formed (similar composition to
the cell wall)
12Yeast
13Pseudohyphae
14Hyphae
15(No Transcript)
16Polarized growth
- Polarized growth is associated with polarization
of actin cytoskeleton - Polarized growth in yeast form
- Bipolar at least 2 scars on opposite ends of
cell - Unipolar 1 scar on one end, 3 or more on
opposite end - Axial 4 or more scars grouped together on one
side - Random scars occuring randomly and ungrouped
around cell - Polarized growth in hyphae form continuously
in a polarized fashion - yeast isotropic growth , Hyphae apical
growth
17Virulence Factors of Candida albicans
18Early events in the pathogenesis of candidiasis
19Detection methods
- Gene disruption C. albicans is diploid,
transformation yield is low - Phenotypic evaluation in vitro (adherence,
growth rates, morphogenesis, etc) - Animal study murine model of hematogenously
disseminated disease - survival
- Tissue colony count
20Virulence factors Adhesins
- Adhesins biomolecule that promotes the
adherence of C. albicans to host cells/ligands - Function host recognition/binding
21Als1p and Als5p
- Agglutinin like sequence
- In S. cerevisiae, a-agglutinin is required for
cell-cell recognition during mating - In C. ablcans, 7 Als proteins are known
- Three domain 5 domain (relatively conserved),
central domain (tandem repeat), 3 domain (serine
threonine rich) - Attached to the cell wall by glycosylphosphatidyli
nositol anchor - Als1p and Als5p appear to provide an adhesin
function - Als1p is essential for virulence in
hematogenously disseminated murine model
22Hwp1p
- Hyphal and germ tube specific protein
- Outer surface mannoprotein
- Covalently linked to cell wall glucan
- N-terminal proline and glutamine-rich domain
- Resemble transglutaminase substrates
- Binding of C. albicans hyphae to human buccal
epithelial cells by stable and covalent bonding - KO reduced virulence in HDC
23Int1p
- C. albicans binds to several ECM ligands
(fibronectin, laminin and collagen I and IV) - Int1p Integrin like protein (18 homology )
- First identified by immunological analysis using
human anti integrin antibody - Functional analysis of Int1p
- Antibody
- Heterologous expression
- Gene knockout analysis ( for adherence and
virulence)
24Adhesins of C. albicans and C. glabrata
25Morphogenesis
- Transition between yeast and filamentous growth
form - The mutant strains lack of the ability to switch
morphology between either form are less virulent
in animal study - Form-specific gene expression
- Morphogenesis is governed by several signal
transduction pathways
26Other protein kinases also govern
morphogenesis PKC, HOG1,SLN1, CHK1
27Transcriptional proteins of C. albcans
28Enzymes that contribute to invasiveness
- Phospholipases (PLA - D)
- PLB1 is associated with virulence
- 84kDa glycoprotein, secreted
- Mutants has 60 reduced host cell killing ability
- Plb1p activity localize at hyphal tips
29Enzymes that contribute to invasiveness
- Secreted aspartyl proteinases (SAP)
- At least nine proteins comprise in SAP family
- Sap1-6 deletions attenuated virulence during
invasive disease - In vitro in vivo expression on SAP production
demonstrated stage specific expression of SAPs
30- In vitro oral epithelial cell
- SAP1 and 3 expressed within 42hr post infection
- SAP6 48hr (most extensive tissue damage)
- SAP2 and 8 60 hr
- SAP4 and 5 never detected
- In vivo human epidermis model
- SAP 1, 2 early invasion
- SAP8, 6 and 3 extensive penetration and
extensive hyphal growth - Vaginitis models SAP2 is required for disease
development
31Phenotypic switching
- White-opaque switching
- Opaque normally dont germinate except if the
opaque cells were grown on human skin epithelial
cells - Differential gene expression
- OPA SAP1 is opaque-specific
- SAP2,3 is white-specific
- Role in virulence ??
- Freshly isolated strains have much
- higher frequencies of switching
- Opaque skin infection, less virulent in
- systemic animal model