Responses of Pathogenic and Nonpathogenic Yeast Species to Steroids Reveal the Functioning and Evolution of Multidrug Resistance Transcriptional Networks

Author:

Banerjee Dibyendu12,Lelandais Gaelle34,Shukla Sudhanshu1,Mukhopadhyay Gauranga2,Jacq Claude3,Devaux Frederic3,Prasad Rajendra1

Affiliation:

1. School of Life Sciences, JNU, New Delhi, India

2. Special Centre for Molecular Medicine, JNU, New Delhi, India

3. Laboratoire de Genetique Moleculaire, Ecole Normale Superieure/CNRS UMR 8541

4. Equipe Bioinformatique Génomique et Moléculaire, INSERM U726/Université Paris 7, Paris 75005, France

Abstract

ABSTRACT Steroids are known to induce pleiotropic drug resistance states in hemiascomycetes, with tremendous potential consequences for human fungal infections. Our analysis of gene expression in Saccharomyces cerevisiae and Candida albicans cells subjected to three different concentrations of progesterone revealed that their pleiotropic drug resistance (PDR) networks were strikingly sensitive to steroids. In S. cerevisiae , 20 of the Pdr1p/Pdr3p target genes, including PDR3 itself, were rapidly induced by progesterone, which mimics the effects of PDR1 gain-of-function alleles. This unique property allowed us to decipher the respective roles of Pdr1p and Pdr3p in PDR induction and to define functional modules among their target genes. Although the expression profiles of the major PDR transporters encoding genes Sc PDR5 and Ca CDR1 were similar, the S. cerevisiae global PDR response to progesterone was only partly conserved in C. albicans . In particular, the role of Tac1p, the main C. albicans PDR regulator, in the progesterone response was apparently restricted to five genes. These results suggest that the C. albicans and S. cerevisiae PDR networks, although sharing a conserved core regarding the regulation of membrane properties, have different structures and properties. Additionally, our data indicate that other as yet undiscovered regulators may second Tac1p in the C. albicans drug response.

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

Subject

Molecular Biology,General Medicine,Microbiology

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