Affiliation:
1. Departments of Genetics,1
2. Medicine,2
3. Microbiology, 3 and
4. Pharmacology and Cancer Biology 4 and
5. Howard Hughes Medical Institute, 5 Duke University Medical Center, Durham, North Carolina 27710
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Cryptococcus neoformans
is an opportunistic fungal pathogen with a defined sexual cycle. The gene encoding a heterotrimeric G-protein β subunit, GPB1, was cloned and disrupted.
gpb1
mutant strains are sterile, indicating a role for this gene in mating. GPB1 plays an active role in mediating responses to pheromones in early mating steps (conjugation tube formation and cell fusion) and signals via a mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase cascade in both
MAT
α and
MAT
a cells. The functions of GPB1 are distinct from those of the Gα protein GPA1, which functions in a nutrient-sensing cyclic AMP (cAMP) pathway required for mating, virulence factor induction, and virulence.
gpb1
mutant strains are also defective in monokaryotic fruiting in response to nitrogen starvation. We show that
MAT
a cells stimulate monokaryotic fruiting of
MAT
α cells, possibly in response to mating pheromone, which may serve to disperse cells and spores to locate mating partners. In summary, the Gβ subunit GPB1 and the Gα subunit GPA1 function in distinct signaling pathways: one (GPB1) senses pheromones and regulates mating and haploid fruiting via a MAP kinase cascade, and the other (GPA1) senses nutrients and regulates mating, virulence factors, and pathogenicity via a cAMP cascade.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Cell Biology,Molecular Biology
Cited by
156 articles.
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