Affiliation:
1. UCD School of Biomolecular and Biomedical Science, Conway Institute, University College Dublin, Belfield, Dublin 4, Ireland
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Candida orthopsilosis
and
Candida metapsilosis
are closely related to
Candida parapsilosis
, a major cause of infection in premature neonates. Mating has not been observed in these species. We show that ∼190 isolates of
C. parapsilosis
contain only an
MTL
a
idiomorph at the mating-type-like locus. Here, we describe the isolation and characterization of the
MTL
loci from
C. orthopsilosis
and
C. metapsilosis
. Among 16
C. orthopsilosis
isolates, 9 were homozygous for
MTL
a
, 5 were homozygous for
MTL
α, and 2 were
MTL
a
/α heterozygotes. The
C. orthopsilosis
isolates belonged to two divergent groups, as characterized by restriction patterns at
MTL
, which probably represent subspecies. We sequenced both idiomorphs from each group and showed that they are 95% identical and that the regulatory genes are intact. In contrast, 18 isolates of
C. metapsilosis
contain only
MTL
α idiomorphs. Our results suggest that the role of
MTL
in determining cell type is being eroded in the
C. parapsilosis
species complex. The population structure of
C. orthopsilosis
indicates that mating may occur. However, expression of genes in the mating signal transduction pathway does not respond to exposure to alpha factor.
C. parapsilosis
is also nonresponsive, even when the GTPase-activating protein gene
SST2
is deleted. In addition, splicing of introns in
MTL
a
1
and
MTL
a
2
is defective in
C. orthopsilosis
. Mating is not detected. The alpha factor peptide, which is the same sequence in
C. parapsilosis
,
C. orthopsilosis
, and
C. metapsilosis
, can induce a mating response in
Candida albicans
. It is therefore likely either that mating of
C. orthopsilosis
takes place under certain unidentified conditions or that the mating pathway has been adapted for other functions, such as cross-species communication.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,General Medicine,Microbiology
Cited by
56 articles.
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