Affiliation:
1. National Center for Natural Products Research
2. Department of Microbiology and Molecular Genetics, The University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston, Houston, Texas 77030
3. Department of Pharmacology
4. Department of Pharmacognosy, School of Pharmacy, University of Mississippi, University, Mississippi 38677
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Sampangine, a plant-derived alkaloid found in the
Annonaceae
family, exhibits strong inhibitory activity against the opportunistic fungal pathogens
Candida albicans
,
Cryptococcus neoformans
, and
Aspergillus fumigatus
. In the present study, transcriptional profiling experiments coupled with analyses of mutants were performed in an effort to elucidate its mechanism of action. Using
Saccharomyces cerevisiae
as a model organism, we show that sampangine produces a transcriptional response indicative of hypoxia, altering the expression of genes known to respond to low-oxygen conditions. Several additional lines of evidence obtained suggest that these responses could involve effects on heme. First, the
hem1
Δ mutant lacking the first enzyme in the heme biosynthetic pathway showed increased sensitivity to sampangine, and exogenously supplied hemin partially rescued the inhibitory activity of sampangine in wild-type cells. In addition, heterozygous mutants with deletions in genes involved in five out of eight steps in the heme biosynthetic pathway showed increased susceptibility to sampangine. Furthermore, spectral analyses of pyridine extracts indicated significant accumulation of free porphyrins in sampangine-treated cells. Transcriptional profiling experiments were also performed with
C. albicans
to investigate the response of a pathogenic fungal species to sampangine. Taking into account the known differences in the physiological responses of
C. albicans
and
S. cerevisiae
to low oxygen, significant correlations were observed between the two transcription profiles, suggestive of heme-related defects. Our results indicate that the antifungal activity of the plant alkaloid sampangine is due, at least in part, to perturbations in the biosynthesis or metabolism of heme.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,General Medicine,Microbiology
Cited by
46 articles.
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