Affiliation:
1. Department of Microbiology and Immunology, University of California-San Francisco, San Francisco, California
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Candida albicans
is the most common human fungal pathogen and causes significant morbidity and mortality worldwide. Nevertheless, the basic principles of
C. albicans
pathogenesis remain poorly understood. Of central importance to the study of this organism is the ability to generate homozygous knockout mutants and to analyze them in a mammalian model of pathogenesis.
C. albicans
is diploid, and current strategies for gene deletion typically involve repeated use of the
URA3
selectable marker. These procedures are often time-consuming and inefficient. Moreover,
URA3
expression levels—which are susceptible to chromosome position effects—can themselves affect virulence, thereby complicating analysis of strains constructed with
URA3
as a selectable marker. Here, we describe a set of newly developed reference strains (
leu2Δ/leu2Δ
,
his1Δ/his1Δ
;
arg4Δ/arg4Δ
,
his1Δ/his1Δ
; and
arg4Δ/arg4Δ
,
leu2Δ/leu2Δ
,
his1Δ/his1Δ
) that exhibit wild-type or nearly wild-type virulence in a mouse model. We also describe new disruption marker cassettes and a fusion PCR protocol that permit rapid and highly efficient generation of homozygous knockout mutations in the new
C. albicans
strains. We demonstrate these procedures for two well-studied genes,
TUP1
and
EFG1
, as well as a novel gene,
RBD1
. These tools should permit large-scale genetic analysis of this important human pathogen.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,General Medicine,Microbiology
Cited by
530 articles.
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