Affiliation:
1. Department of Molecular Genetics and Microbiology, Box 3020, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, North Carolina 27710
Abstract
ABSTRACT
The fungally conserved subset of amino acid biosynthetic enzymes not present in humans offer exciting potential as an unexploited class of antifungal drug targets. Since threonine biosynthesis is essential in
Cryptococcus neoformans
, we further explored the potential of threonine biosynthetic enzymes as antifungal drug targets by determining the survival in mice of
Saccharomyces cerevisiae
homoserine kinase (
thr1
Δ) and threonine synthase (
thr4
Δ) mutants. In striking contrast to aspartate kinase (
hom3
Δ) mutants,
S. cerevisiae
thr1
Δ and
thr4
Δ mutants were severely depleted after only 4 h
in vivo
. Similarly,
Candida albicans
thr1
Δ mutants, but not
hom3
Δ mutants, were significantly attenuated in virulence. Consistent with the
in vivo
phenotypes,
S. cerevisiae
thr1
Δ and
thr4
Δ mutants as well as
C. albicans
thr1
Δ mutants were extremely serum sensitive. In both species, serum sensitivity was suppressed by the addition of threonine, a feedback inhibitor of Hom3p. Because mutation of the
HOM3
and
HOM6
genes, required for the production of the toxic pathway intermediate homoserine, also suppressed serum sensitivity, we hypothesize that serum sensitivity is a consequence of homoserine accumulation. Serum survival is critical for dissemination, an important virulence determinant: thus, together with the essential nature of
C. neoformans
threonine synthesis, the cross-species serum sensitivity of
thr1
Δ mutants makes the fungus-specific Thr1p, and likely Thr4p, ideal antifungal drug targets.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,General Medicine,Microbiology
Cited by
31 articles.
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