Affiliation:
1. Institut für Molekulare Infektionsbiologie, Universität Würzburg, Röntgenring 11, D-97070 Würzburg, Germany
Abstract
ABSTRACT
The genetic analysis of
Candida albicans
, the major fungal pathogen of humans, is hampered by its diploid genome, the absence of a normal sexual cycle, and a nonstandard codon usage. Although effective methods to study gene function have been developed in the past years, systems to control gene expression in
C. albicans
are limited. We have established a system that allows induction of gene expression in
C. albicans
by the addition of tetracycline (Tet). By fusing genetically modified versions of the reverse Tet repressor from
Escherichia coli
and the transcription activation domain of the Gal4 protein from
Saccharomyces cerevisiae
, a
C. albicans
-adapted reverse Tet-dependent transactivator (rtTA) was created that was expressed from the constitutive
ADH1
or the opaque-specific
OP4
promoter. To monitor Tet-inducible gene expression, the
caGFP
reporter gene was placed under the control of a Tet-dependent promoter, obtained by fusing a minimal promoter from
C. albicans
to seven copies of the Tet operator sequence. Fluorescence of the cells demonstrated that gene expression could be efficiently induced by the addition of doxycycline in yeast, hyphal, and opaque cells of
C. albicans
. The Tet-inducible gene expression system was then used to manipulate the behavior of the various growth forms of
C. albicans
. Tet-induced expression of a dominant-negative
CDC42
allele resulted in growth arrest as large, multinucleate cells. Filamentous growth was efficiently inhibited under all tested hyphal-growth-promoting conditions by Tet-inducible expression of the
NRG1
repressor. Tet-induced expression of the
MTL
a
1
gene in opaque cells of an
MTL
α strain forced the cells to switch to the white phase, whereas Tet-induced expression of the
MTL
a
2
transcription factor induced shmooing. When the
ecaFLP
gene, encoding the site-specific recombinase FLP, was placed under the control of the Tet-dependent promoter, Tet-inducible deletion of genes which were flanked by the FLP target sequences was achieved with high efficiency to generate conditional null mutants. In combination with the dominant selection marker
caSAT1
, the Tet-inducible gene expression system was also applied in
C. albicans
wild-type strains, including drug-resistant clinical isolates that overexpressed the
MDR1
,
CDR1
, and
CDR2
multidrug efflux pumps. This system, therefore, allows a growth medium-independent, Tet-inducible expression and deletion of genes in
C. albicans
and provides a convenient, versatile new tool to study gene function and manipulate cellular behavior in this model pathogenic fungus.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,General Medicine,Microbiology