Affiliation:
1. Department of Biological Sciences, Center for Molecular and Cellular Biosciences, University of Southern Mississippi, Hattiesburg, Mississippi 39406-5018
Abstract
ABSTRACT
The dimorphic fungus
Histoplasma capsulatum
is the etiologic agent of one of the most common systemic mycoses of humans, histoplasmosis. In the environment,
H. capsulatum
grows in a differentiated mold form and shifts to an undifferentiated yeast form after mold fragments or spores are inhaled. This mold-to-yeast shift is required for disease. Little is known about the molecular biology of dimorphism in
Histoplasma
, and most studies have been directed toward yeast-specific genes. While it is important to examine the role of genes upregulated in the yeast morphotype, genes which are silenced in the yeast (i.e., mold-specific genes) may also play a critical role in dimorphism. To begin to examine this hypothesis, we report here the first misexpression and knockout analysis of a mold-specific gene in
Histoplasma
. The strongly expressed
MS8
gene encodes a predicted 21-kDa protein extremely rich in glycine and glutamine. Forced expression of
MS8
driven by the
TEF1
promoter in yeast did not alter the yeast morphology at 37°C or mold formation at 25°C. Yeast expressing
MS8
did exhibit clumping in liquid medium and formed “sticky” colonies on agar plates. Allelic replacement of
MS8
was accomplished by a positive-negative selection procedure.
ms8
knockout mutants formed apparently normal yeast at 37°C but gave rise to aberrant mycelia at 25°C. The mold colonies of the knockouts were less than half as large as normal, had a granular surface, produced a dark-red pigment, and formed short hyphae which were 40% wider with a distinctive twisted “zig-zag” shape.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,General Medicine,Microbiology
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