Affiliation:
1. Department of Microbiology and Immunology, Drexel University College of Medicine, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Candida glabrata
has emerged as a common cause of fungal infection. This yeast has intrinsically low susceptibility to azole antifungals such as fluconazole, and mutation to frank azole resistance during treatment has been documented. Potential resistance mechanisms include changes in expression or sequence of
ERG11
encoding the azole target. Alternatively, resistance could result from upregulated expression of multidrug transporter genes; in
C. glabrata
these include
CDR1
and
PDH1
. By RNA hybridization, 10 of 12 azole-resistant clinical isolates showed 6- to 15-fold upregulation of
CDR1
compared to susceptible strains. In 4 of these 10 isolates
PDH1
was similarly upregulated, and in the remainder it was upregulated three- to fivefold, while
ERG11
expression was minimally changed. Laboratory mutants were selected on fluconazole-containing medium with glycerol as carbon source (to eliminate mitochondrial mutants). Similar to the clinical isolates, six of seven laboratory mutants showed unchanged
ERG11
expression but coordinate
CDR1-PDH1
upregulation ranging from 2- to 20-fold. Effects of antifungal treatment on gene expression in susceptible
C. glabrata
strains were also studied: azole exposure induced
CDR1-PDH1
expression 4- to 12-fold. These findings suggest that these transporter genes are regulated by a common mechanism. In support of this, a mutation associated with laboratory resistance was identified in the
C. glabrata
homolog of
PDR1
which encodes a regulator of multidrug transporter genes in
Saccharomyces cerevisiae
. The mutation falls within a putative activation domain and was associated with
PDR1
autoupregulation. Additional regulatory factors remain to be identified, as indicated by the lack of
PDR1
mutation in a clinical isolate with coordinately upregulated
CDR1-PDH1
.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Pharmacology (medical),Pharmacology
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