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Infection and Immunity, August 2006, p. 4865-4874, Vol. 74, No. 8
0019-9567/06/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/IAI.00565-06
Copyright © 2006, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, Ohio 45267-0529
Received 5 April 2006/ Returned for modification 28 April 2006/ Accepted 26 May 2006
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pkaR mutant are more
sensitive to killing by hydrogen peroxide, menadione, paraquat, and
diamide. However, the hyphae of the mutant are killed to a greater
extent only by paraquat and diamide, whereas they are less susceptible
to the effects of hydrogen peroxide. In an immunosuppressed mouse
model, intranasally administered conidia of the mutant are
significantly less virulent than those of the wild type or a
complemented mutant. Unregulated PKA signaling is detrimental to the
virulence of A. fumigatus, perhaps through the reduced
susceptibility of the mutant to damage by oxidizing agents and reduced
growth
kinetics. |
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The cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase (PKA) is a well-known regulator of the stress response in eukaryotes. PKA is a heterotetramer, made up of a dimer of regulatory subunits and two catalytic subunits. Fungal regulatory subunits are homologues of mammalian type II subunits, based on the autoinhibition site (29). When cAMP binds to the regulatory subunits, a conformational change occurs, which releases the catalytic subunits to autophosphorylate and to phosphorylate downstream targets. PKA signaling in Saccharomyces cerevisiae regulates the general stress control pathway (11, 26). Mutants lacking BCY1, the gene encoding the regulatory subunit of PKA in S. cerevisiae, have unregulated PKA activity; these mutants are pseudohyphal in morphology and hypersensitive to killing with hydrogen peroxide (15, 44).
The PKA pathway also regulates morphology and virulence in a number of fungal pathogens of humans and plants. PKA signaling in Candida albicans has been shown to regulate efg1-controlled morphological responses (22). Deletion of the regulatory subunit of PKA in C. albicans, in a strain also lacking the tpk2 catalytic subunit, results in defective hyphal formation (5). Because efg1 regulates transcription of a number of hypha-specific, virulence-associated traits, it is not surprising that mutations in components of PKA would have reduced virulence (19). The PKA pathway regulates mating, virulence factor production, and virulence in serotype A of Cryptococcus neoformans. In serotype D, PKA regulates mating and some virulence factors but not virulence itself. Indeed, mutants of serotype A that lack the regulatory subunit of PKA overproduce capsule and are hypervirulent, whereas those same mutants in serotype D have wild-type (WT) virulence (16). In the plant pathogen Ustilago maydis, deletion of the regulatory subunit of PKA leads to a multiple-budding phenotype and the inability to form galls in colonized plants, which was reflected in reduced disease scores (14).
Within
the genus Aspergillus, analysis of PKA signaling has been
limited to Aspergillus niger, Aspergillus nidulans,
and Aspergillus fumigatus
(2,
21,
27,
40). Deletion of one or
more catalytic subunits in each of these fungi has been shown to
decrease growth, to reduce the tolerance to oxidative stress, and, in
A. fumigatus, to reduce virulence, perhaps by modulation of
the expression of polyketide synthase
(18,
20). Interestingly, in
A. nidulans, deletion of pkaA, one of the catalytic
subunits, or overexpression of pkaB, the second catalytic
subunit, leads to increased sensitivity to oxidative stress
(27). We have previously
shown with A. fumigatus that transcripts for the regulatory
subunit of PKA, pkaR, are up-regulated when the fungus is
grown in the presence of endothelial cells or pulmonary epithelial
cells (29,
36). In this study, we
have used a mutant of A. fumigatus that lacks pkaR to
test the hypothesis that tightly controlled PKA activity is required
for the oxidative stress response and virulence of the organism. Here
we report that a
pkaR mutant has reduced growth and
germination rates, increased susceptibility to oxidative stress, and
reduced virulence in an immunosuppressed mouse model of
IA.
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Construction of the pkaR isogenic set. The pkaR coding sequence (accession no. AF401202) with 5'and 3' flanking DNA was amplified from H237 genomic DNA using a 5' primer (5'-CCTCCCTCCTACTACTACCCC-3') and a 3' primer (5'-GGTTGCGTTCGAGTCTCC-3') and cloned into pCR 2.1-TOPO (Invitrogen, Carlsbad, CA). The PCR product was moved as a SpeI-XhoI fragment into plasmid pSL1180 (GE Healthcare Bioscience, Little Chalfont, United Kingdom) that had been cut with SpeI-SalI, yielding plasmid pSL1180-pkaR (4). The hygromycin resistance marker was removed from plasmid pMAD91 by digestion with XhoI and XbaI, and the overhangs were filled in (46). The coding region of pkaR was removed from pSL1180-pkaR by digestion with SmaI and SacI, the SacI site was blunted, and the hygromycin cassette was cloned into the modified SmaI-SacI-cut DNA. This plasmid was digested with EcoRI to release the deletion construct; approximately 10 µg of the deletion construct was used to transform protoplasts of A. fumigatus, using standard techniques (31). Hygromycin-resistant colonies were selected, screened for homologous recombination by PCR, and confirmed by Southern blotting.
A
complement ation construct was built by removing the phleomycin
resistance cassette as an XhoI fragment from pBCPhleo and blunting the
ends (39).
pSL1180-pkaR was digested with SpeI and filled in, and the
phleomycin marker was ligated into the plasmid to make plasmid
pSL1180-pkaR(phleo). To reconstitute the pkaR gene at
its native locus,
pkaR protoplasts were transformed
with undigested pSL1180-pkaR(phleo), and a
phleomycin-resistant colony that showed homologous reconstitution of
the pkaR gene by Southern blotting was designated
pkaR C'.
Southern blotting analysis. Genomic DNA was extracted from the crushed mycelial pellets by phenol-chloroform extraction. Restriction digests of genomic DNA were fractionated on a 1% agarose gel and transferred to a nylon membrane (Hybond-N; GE Healthcare Bioscience). Membranes were hybridized to a 32P-labeled random-primed pkaR DNA probe and washed under stringent conditions according to the manufacturer's recommendations.
Developmental analysis of isogenic set. Cultures of each member of the isogenic set were grown for analysis of asexual development as previously described (29). Preparations enriched for the developmental stages were photographed using differential interference contrast microscopy.
PKA activity assay.
A.
fumigatus strains were grown in liquid AMM at 37°C and
harvested at the same growth stage, 8 h for the WT and
pkaR C' strains and 16 h for the
pkaR strain. Mycelium was harvested and washed with
ice-cold water twice, dried on filter paper, frozen in
liquid nitrogen, and ground with a mortar and pestle. Crushed hyphae
were suspended in extraction buffer (25 mM Tris-HCl, pH 7.4, 1 mM
dithiothreitol, 1 mM EDTA) and centrifuged at 20,000 x
g for 15 min in the cold. Protein was measured with the
bicinchoninic acid method (Pierce Chemicals, Rockford, IL) as described
by the manufacturer. PKA enzyme activity was measured by kemptide
phosphorylation (PepTag assay for nonradioactive detection of
cAMP-dependent protein kinase from Promega, Madison, WI). Purified
cAMP-dependent PKA catalytic subunit from bovine heart (Promega) was
used as a standard. The incubation time was 30 min at room temperature.
Quantitation was performed with a phosphorimager (Storm; GE Healthcare
Bioscience). Activity was expressed as U per milligram of protein.
Values were compared using a paired t test
(SigmaStat).
Analysis of sensitivity to oxidative stress.
Conidia
from WT,
pkaR and pkaR C' strains
were harvested with sterile water from 5-day-old AMM plates, filtered
through two layers of Miracloth (EMD Biosciences, San Diego, CA), and
counted with a hemacytometer. Conidia were put on ice until treatment.
The sensitivity of conidia and hyphae to oxidative stress was assayed
separately, as previously described
(32). For conidia,
106 were mixed with an oxidizing agent, incubated at
37°C for 30 min, and then diluted and plated on AMM plates,
followed by incubation at 30°C. Colonies arising from surviving
conidia were counted for up to 4 days. The sensitivity of hyphae to
oxidative stress was measured by allowing conidia to form germlings at
30°C on AMM plates (24 h for WT and pkaR C'
strains and 30 h for the
pkaR strain). All
plates were overlaid with 10 ml of the different stressors, incubated
for 10 min at 30°C, washed twice with water, and then incubated
at 30°C for up to 3 days. Control plates were overlaid with
water, and the colony counts from these plates were set as 100%.
Other treatment groups were compared to the water control
for that strain. Each assay was performed in triplicate. Statistical
significance was assessed by analysis of variance on square-root
transformed proportional data, followed by post hoc, pairwise analysis
using the Tukey Test (InStat; San Diego, CA). Differences were
considered significant when P values were <0.05.
H2O2 (30% stock) was purchased from Fisher
(Fairlawn, NJ), and menadione (menadione sodium bisulfite), diamide
(N,N,N',N'-tetramethyazodicarboxamide), and
paraquat (methyl viologen) were purchased from Sigma-Aldrich (St.
Louis, MO).
Animal infection model. Charles River CF-1 female mice weighing 20 to 24 g were immunosuppressed by intraperitoneal injection of cyclophosphamide (150 mg kg1; Cytoxan; Baxter Healthcare Corporation, Deerfield, IL) on day 3 and triamcinolone acetonide (40 mg kg1; Kenalog-10; BMS Company, Princeton, NJ) injected subcutaneously in the nape of the neck on day 1 (12). Tetracycline hydrochloride (Sigma) was provided in the water at a concentration of 500 µg ml1 to prevent bacterial infection. Groups of 16 mice per strain were anesthetized with 3.5% isofluorane and inoculated intranasally with (1 to 5) x 105 conidia in 20 µl of sterile saline on day 0. A group of 8 mice was inoculated with saline as a control. Mortality was monitored for the next 14 days, and mice that appeared moribund were sacrificed by CO2 euthanasia. The right lung and right kidney and the brain of each mouse were plated onto inhibitory mold agar (BD, Franklin Lakes, NJ) to determine rates of dissemination, and the genotypes of isolates were confirmed by drug resistance phenotype analysis. The statistical significance of the survival data was assessed by Kruskall-Wallis with pairwise analysis performed post hoc by using Dunn's procedure (SigmaStat).
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pkaR strain, was identified
by the loss of the 4.2-kb WT PstI fragment and the appearance
of the expected 2.7-kb PstI fragment (Fig.
1D). To complement the
mutation, a plasmid carrying a wild-type copy of pkaR, flanked
by a phleomycin resistance gene (Fig.
1C), was used to transform
pkaR protoplasts. Monoconidial isolates of
phleomycin-resistant transformants were selected for Southern blotting
analysis. A strain with a homologous integration of the complementation
plasmid, which showed the 2.7-kb band from the deletion event plus a
6.1-kb band representing the WT gene, selection marker, and plasmid
sequence (Fig. 1D), was
chosen for further analysis. The complemented strain was designated
pkaR C'.
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FIG. 1. Deletion
and complementation of the pkaR gene. A. The wild-type locus
for pkaR. B. The majority of the open reading frame (black
arrow) for pkaR in A. fumigatus was deleted and
replaced with the hygromycin resistance gene (Hyg R) by homologous
recombination to produce pkaR. C. A wild-type gene,
flanked by the phleomycin resistance gene (phleo R), was integrated
into the right flanking DNA in the deletion strain to complement the
mutation, producing pkaR C'. D. Genomic DNA from each
member of the isogenic set was cut with PstI and probed with a piece of
the left arm (black box marked probe) to detect the wild-type (4.2 kb),
deletion (2.7 kb), and recombinant (6.1 kb) bands. P, PstI; H, HindIII;
Sm, SmaI; Sa, SalI; Xb, XbaI; Xh, XhoI.
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pkaR mutant.
Deletion of the regulatory subunit of
PKA would be expected to result in loss of regulation of the PKA
activity by cAMP. In order to test this prediction, hyphal extracts
were prepared from each member of the isogenic set. Kemptide
phosphorylation was used to measure PKA activity in each extract, with
and without the addition of exogenous cAMP. As shown in Table
1, both the WT strain and the pkaR C' complemented strain
showed a significant increase in PKA activity following the addition of
cAMP, whereas the activity in the mutant lacking the regulatory subunit
did not change when cAMP was added. These findings confirm that the
isogenic set has the expected phenotype with respect to cAMP
responsiveness and that catalytic activity remains intact in the
pkaR mutant. |
View this table: [in a new window] |
TABLE 1. PKA activity in the pkaR mutant is not regulated by cAMPa
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pkaR mutant has abnormal conidiation and pigmentation.
When the three
members of the isogenic set were grown on AMM, there were several
obvious differences between the
pkaR mutant and the
WT and pkaR C' strains beyond the colony size. The
surface of the mutant colony was less powdery than the other two, and
there was a delay in conidiation in the mutant compared with the WT and
pkaR C' (Fig.
2A). The reduced conidiation phenotype was consistent with
the microscopic morphology showing that the size of the terminal
vesicle, the number of phialides, and the number of conidia per chain
were all decreased in the mutant compared with the wild type (Fig.
2C). In addition, clavate
vesicles were often formed at the apex of septate hyphae, rather than
on a specialized hyphal branch, the nonseptate conidiophore. Although
the hyphal wall of the
pkaR mutant appeared thicker
and more pigmented than did that of the WT (Fig.
2D), the more striking
difference was seen on the reverse of the colonies; the reverse
side of the
pkaR mutant was highly
pigmented (Fig. 2B). The
intensity of the pigmentation was accentuated when the carbon source of
the AMM was changed from glucose to fructose or glycerol (data not
shown).
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FIG. 2. Morphology
of the pkaR mutant compared with the WT and the
complemented strains. A. The forward side of the colonies is shown
after growth on AMM at 30°C for 5 days. B. The reverse side of
the same colonies, illustrating the highly pigmented reverse side of
the pkaR mutant. C. Microscopic morphology of the
conidial heads of the isolates grown under the same conditions for
48 h, showing the poorly developed conidial heads in the
mutant. D. The early hyphae of the pkaR mutant are
wider, thicker, and darker than those of the WT. C and D were
photographed with differential interference contrast at magnification
x40.
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pkaR mutant are decreased.
Point inoculation of each strain on AMM
plates, followed by incubation at 37°C, showed that the growth
rate of the mutant was impaired relative to those of the other two
members of the isogenic set (Fig.
2A). The small-colony
phenotype could be due to slower or delayed germination, to decreased
viability of the conidia, to a decreased rate of apical extension, or
to a combination of factors.
The germination rates of the three
strains were measured over a 14-h period at 37°C, and the
results from a representative experiment are shown in Fig.
3. The WT and pkaR C' strains began to show germ tubes
shortly after 4 h; the proportion of conidia showing germ
tubes increased rapidly over the next 2 h, and 100%
of the conidia had germinated by 7.5 h. The mutant was slow
to germinate; approximately 20% of the conidia had germinated by
9 h. Between 9 and 12 h, an additional 50% of the
conidia germinated, with slightly decreased kinetics compared with the
WT. However, germination of the
pkaR conidia never
exceeded 75 to 80%. Indeed, when conidia from plates older than 5 days
were used, total germination in the mutant fell to <50%,
whereas the germination of the WT and complemented strains was
unchanged. Morphologically, the germ tubes of the mutant were shorter
and broader than were those of the WT.
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FIG. 3. Germination
in AMM. Conidia were incubated in AMM at 37°C, and the presence
of germ tubes was scored as percent germination at indicated time
intervals.
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pkaR strain had not yet
filled the petri dish. Growth rates at 30° and 37°C,
calculated between 24 and 48 h, were consistent with the
colony diameters; the growth rates of the mutant were approximately
half that of the WT at both temperatures (Fig.
4). Therefore, it is likely that a combination of all three factors
contributed to the smaller colony size of the
mutant.
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FIG. 4. Radial
growth rates on AMM. Ten-microliter drops containing 104
conidia were inoculated into the middle of 50-mm plates and incubated
at 30°C and 37°C. Colony diameters were measured at
24-h intervals, and the rate of radial growth was calculated for the
interval between 24 and 48
h.
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pkaR conidia.
The PKA pathway has been reported to
control response to oxidative damage in numerous organisms. Therefore,
we sought to examine the susceptibility of a mutant with unregulated
PKA activity to several oxidative agents with different modes of
action. The activities of H2O2, diamide,
menadione, and paraquat were tested against both conidia and
hyphae of the members of the isogenic set. As shown in
Table 2, the conidia of the
pkaR strain were more susceptible
to killing by all four of the oxidative agents. When the conidia were
allowed to germinate before exposure to the oxidant, only paraquat and
diamide were markedly more active against the mutant. Interestingly,
H2O2 was slightly less active against the
germlings. Although the decrease in susceptibility seen when testing
the mutant hyphae with hydrogen peroxide was small, it was consistent,
even at concentrations not reported
here. |
View this table: [in a new window] |
TABLE 2. Survival
from oxidative damage by conidia and hyphae of the
pkaR isogenic seta
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pkaR strain had reduced virulence in a murine model of IA.
In order to determine the effect of
unregulated PKA on the pathogenesis of IA, (1 to 5) x
105 conidia from the WT,
pkaR, and
pkaR C' strains were inoculated intranasally into
immunosuppressed mice (Fig.
5). Because of the lower viability of the mutant, the total number of
conidia delivered was adjusted so that equivalent numbers of viable
conidia were inoculated. The mice in the
pkaR group
actually received almost 3.5 times more conidia than the mice in the WT
or pkaR C' groups, yet the mice inoculated with the
pkaR mutant survived significantly longer (P
< 0.05). No deaths were recorded when mice were inoculated with
saline. When inocula were reduced to approximately 104, none
of the mice receiving the mutant died, whereas approximately 50% of the
WT and pkaR C' groups did (data not shown). In the
experiment shown in Fig.
5, the right
lung, right kidney, and the brain of all animals were cultured
at the time of death or following the end of the experiment when the
survivors were sacrificed (Fig.
6). Virtually none of the mice inoculated with the WT or pkaR
C' strain were able to clear the organism from their lungs, and
most of them had evidence of dissemination to the kidney, even though
the immunosuppression was transient in this model. Only about half of
the lungs and the kidneys of the mice that received the mutant were
still positive. Although there was some dissemination to the brain in
all groups, the numbers were low overall. None of the control animals,
which were inoculated with saline, had positive cultures in any organ.
Finally, all the lung isolates from all animals were phenotyped for
drug resistance markers, and the results showed that there was no
cross-contamination among
groups.
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FIG. 5. Survival
of mice inoculated with members of PkaR isogenic set. Immunosuppressed
mice (groups of 16) were inoculated intranasally with (1 to 5)
x 104 conidia, and survival was followed for 14
days. Control mice (group of 8; not shown) that were given saline
intranasally all survived for 14
days.
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FIG. 6. Fungal
clearance and dissemination. Organs were cultured from mice that died
and from survivors that were sacrificed after 14 days. Nothing grew
from the organs of the control mice (saline inoculated). All lung
isolates were phenotyped by testing for hygromycin and phleomycin
resistance.
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We have used four different agents to cause the oxidative damage, since no one oxidant is representative of oxidative stress. For example, it has been shown that yeast cells of S. cerevisiae have constitutive defense systems that are fairly specific for each individual stressor, but the induced systems that are responsible for repair, the general environmental stress response, are largely shared (43). The reactive oxygen species hydrogen peroxide is widely used because it is highly reactive with a broad spectrum of targets. In addition, the presence of H2O2 can lead to production of hydroxyl radicals via the Fenton reaction. Menadione and paraquat are redox cycling agents, and they work by generating superoxide by reducing molecular oxygen at the expense of NADPH in aerobically growing cells. The superoxide can then be dismutated, resulting in the formation of H2O2. Diamide can cause oxidative stress more indirectly by oxidizing glutathione, shifting the redox balance of the cell, and reacting with sulfhydryl groups on proteins (42). Therefore, we reasoned that using these different oxidizing agents should give us a significantly better chance to detect phenotypic changes in the pkaR mutant than would the use of a single agent (43).
In order to
determine whether the
pkaR mutant would show the lack
of regulation predicted, PKA activity was tested in extracts from all
three members of the isogenic set. The activity detected in the WT
extract increased significantly when exogenous cAMP was added, whereas
there was no increase seen in the mutant, confirming the lack of cAMP
dependence in the PKA activity of the
pkaR strain.
One feature noted was that the overall activity seen in the mutant was
not extraordinarily high. There does not seem to be a consensus in how
filamentous fungi respond to deletion of the PKA regulatory subunit;
the A. niger mutant has approximately the same level of
activity as in the wild type, whereas the activity in the
Colletotrichum mutant is significantly increased over the
basal level (40,
41).
Deletion
mutants of pkaR were phenotypically different from the WT in
both macroscopic and microscopic features. The slower radial growth
seen with the A. fumigatus
pkaR mutant
appears to be a common feature of regulatory subunit mutants of
filamentous fungi, since it has also been reported for Neurospora
crassa, Colletotrichum lagenarium, and A. niger
(1,
40,
41). Germination rates
are similar to the phenotypes described for A. niger mutants.
Conidiation defects, ranging from failure to conidiate (A.
niger) to delayed (A. fumigatus) or decreased (C.
lagenarium) conidiation, also appear to be common to PKA
regulatory subunit mutations in filamentous fungi, supporting a key
role for PKA signaling in asexual development of these organisms
(1,
40,
41). An interesting
morphological feature of the A. niger
pkaR
mutant is the distinctive bulbous cells that develop during submerged
growth. This is similar to the loss of growth polarity that has been
reported for Neurospora crassa mutants that are defective in
the regulatory subunit of PKA
(1,
40). The hyphal diameter
of the A. fumigatus
pkaR mutant was
increased, but there was no evidence of loss of polarity following
12 h in submerged culture. Macroscopically, when grown on
solid medium, the reverse of the A. fumigatus
pkaR colony appears dark, presumably due to
pigmentation of the hyphae. Expression of pksP is decreased in
A. fumigatus isolates deleted for the major catalytic subunit
of PKA, and our data would suggest that pksP may be
inappropriately expressed in the
pkaR mutant, leading
to pigmentation in hyphae that would normally be hyaline
(20).
The PKA pathway has been studied with a number of other yeasts and molds, including some that are pathogenic for animals and plants. For the model organism S. cerevisiae, PKA mediates the general stress response as well as regulating the specific oxidative response through the transcription factors Yap1p and Pos9p (6). Genetic conditions that result in decreased PKA pathway activity, such as deletion of one or more catalytic subunits, lead to increased H2O2 stress resistance, whereas those conditions that lead to increased PKA pathway activity, such as deletion of BCY1, the regulatory subunit, result in decreased resistance to H2O2 stress (15, 43, 44). The decreased resistance to oxidative stress in the bcy1 strain may be because the mutant fails to activate Yap1p-dependent gene transcription following exposure to H2O2 (15).
In the plant-
and human-pathogenic yeasts, Ustilago maydis, Candida
albicans, and Cryptococcus neoformans, PKA signaling
plays an important role in morphogenesis, growth, and virulence.
Disruption of adr1, one of the PKA catalytic subunits in
U. maydis, results in a constitutively filamentous phenotype
and loss of virulence
(10). The regulatory
subunit, encoded by ubc1, is required for filamentous growth,
and deletion mutants are multiply budded. Although the ubc1
mutants can colonize maize, they have impaired virulence, and the plant
does not form galls in response to the growth of the mutant
(14). Both PKA catalytic
subunits of C. albicans are involved in the control of
morphogenesis in the organism
(3). For TPK2,
this control is mediated through its activation of the transcription
factor Efg1p. Because of the importance of the yeast-to-hyphae switch
in the virulence of C. albicans, mutants lacking TPK2
are attenuated in a mouse model of candidiasis
(19,
22). Contrary to what is
known about regulatory subunit mutants in other organisms, homozygous
bcy1 mutants of C. albicans are not viable, but the
homozygous mutation can be created in a
tpk2 mutant
background. Although the role of unregulated PKA activity in virulence
has not been examined, these double mutants display PKA activity that
is not responsive to the addition of cAMP, reduced germination, and
decreased viability (5).
PKA regulation of virulence in C. neoformans differs depending
on which variety is being studied. In the more-common variety
grubii (serotype A), Pka1 controls mating and production of
the virulence factors melanin and capsule;
pka1
strains are avirulent. Variety grubii mutants lacking the
regulatory subunit, pkr1, overproduce melanin and capsule and
are hypervirulent (9).
Pka2 does not function in regulating any of these virulence traits in
serotype A, but in serotype D (variety neoformans), Pka2 plays
the predominant role. In this variety,
pka2 mutants
fail to mate, do not undergo haploid fruiting, and fail to produce
melanin and capsule. Pka1 does not play any discernible role in
regulating these processes in variety neoformans. Perhaps the
most surprising finding is that both
pka2 and
pkr1 mutants of serotype D have wild-type virulence,
even though Pka2 regulates well known cryptococcal virulence factors
(16). Clearly, although
the PKA signaling pathways are generally well conserved, their end
targets share both similarities and differences. The evolutionary
distance between these closely related pathogenic yeasts has resulted
in highly divergent modes of regulation of virulence.
In the filamentous fungi, N. crassa has been used as a model to study many developmental processes. The loss-of-growth-polarity phenotype described for the mcb regulatory subunit mutant is suppressed by a second mutation in PKAC-1, the major catalytic subunit in N. crassa. Although these mutants were not tested for stress per se, increased thermotolerance, which was defined as a decreased susceptibility to heat shock, was reported for the pkac-1 mutant but not for the mcb mutant (1). Mutation of the regulatory subunit of PKA in A. nidulans has not been reported. However, when pkaA, the major catalytic subunit, is deleted, radial growth of the colony is decreased, which is the same phenotype reported for the comparable mutant for both A. niger and A. fumigatus (38). Deletion of pkaB in A. nidulans does not lead to a growth defect, and deletion of the pkaB homologue in A. niger or A. fumigatus has not been reported. Neither overexpression nor deletion of pkaB in A. nidulans yielded a thermotolerant phenotype, as described for N. crassa. However, both deletion of pkaA and overexpression of pkaB does lead to increased susceptibility of the hyphae to H2O2. These findings suggested that the two catalytic subunits in A. nidulans play opposite roles in the regulation of the response to oxidative stress (27). For A. fumigatus, our data support the hypothesis that correct regulation of PKA is required for wild-type resistance to oxidative damage inflicted by a range of mechanisms. Conidia appear susceptible to oxidative damage regardless of the agent used, perhaps because the processes involved in breaking dormancy are energetically expensive and redox sensitive. This might be analogous to the model suggested for S. cerevisiae, in which increased sensitivity to a number of different oxidants is due to a failure in some constitutive process required for resistance to oxidative stress (43). Although the hyphal response to the agents was more varied, the mutant was more susceptible to oxidative damage caused by the redox cycling agent paraquat and diamide, which targets sulfhydryl groups. It is tempting to speculate that the increased resistance of the hyphae to H2O2 may be due to an increase in melanin content of the hyphal walls, as suggested by the dark reverse of the colony, but one would expect that the quenching of reactive oxygen species by melanin would be a more general observation (18).
The
pkaR mutant of A. fumigatus has reduced radial growth
and increased susceptibility to oxidative damage, and both of these
phenotypes have been associated with reduced virulence in A.
fumigatus. In an immunocompromised mouse model of invasive
aspergillosis, the group that received the
pkaR
strain did experience reduced mortality compared with the groups
receiving the wild type or the complemented strain. Reduced virulence
has been reported for different filamentous fungal mutants, as well as
for the yeasts, in which the regulation of PKA is impaired. Mutants of
Colletotrichum that lack the regulatory subunit of PKA grow
more slowly than the wild type and fail to infect intact cucumber
leaves, although they can infect wounded leaves
(41). When the catalytic
subunit is deleted from Magnaporthe, the mutants are unable to
infect rice leaves, whether or not they are abraded
(25). And in A.
fumigatus, pkaC1 deletion mutants are almost avirulent
(21). Although it is
difficult to compare results from different models and mutants produced
in different backgrounds, the virulence phenotype of the regulatory
subunit mutants appears less severe. This suggests that it is more
deleterious to virulence to have reduced PKA activity than to have
unregulated activity. However, since mutational analysis is incomplete
for many of these organisms, including A. fumigatus, it may be
premature to speculate on the overall contribution of the signaling
system. In addition, the cross talk between signaling pathways may be
shown to be the primary factor controlling growth and virulence,
similar to the role played by PKA and TOR in regulating growth in yeast
(47). Clearly, the
precedent in Cryptococcus suggests that although core
signaling pathways may be conserved, regulation of these pathways and
ultimate targets may lead to markedly different results for very
similar organisms (16).
Our current efforts are directed toward delineating PKA targets in
A. fumigatus and elucidating their roles in regulating
pathogenesis of this important opportunistic
pathogen.
This work was supported in part by NIH grants AI041119 and AI061497 to J.C.R. and AI061495 to D.S.A.
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