Affiliation:
1. Department of Medicine, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, North Carolina
2. Center for Infectious Diseases and Microbiology and Westmead Millennium Institute, University of Sydney, Sydney, Australia
3. Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts
Abstract
ABSTRACT
The disaccharide trehalose has been found to play diverse roles, from energy source to stress protectant, and this sugar is found in organisms as diverse as bacteria, fungi, plants, and invertebrates but not in mammals. Recent studies in the pathobiology of
Cryptococcus neoformans
identified the presence of a functioning trehalose pathway during infection and suggested its importance for
C. neoformans
survival in the host. Therefore, in
C. neoformans
we created null mutants of the trehalose-6-phosphate (T6P) synthase (
TPS1
), trehalose-6-phophate phosphatase (
TPS2
), and neutral trehalase (
NTH1
) genes. We found that both
TPS1
and
TPS2
are required for high-temperature (37°C) growth and glycolysis but that the block at
TPS2
results in the apparent toxic accumulation of T6P, which makes this enzyme a fungicidal target. Sorbitol suppresses the growth defect in the
tps1
and
tps2
mutants at 37°C, which supports the hypothesis that these sugars (trehalose and sorbitol) act primarily as stress protectants for proteins and membranes during exposure to high temperatures in
C. neoformans
. The essential nature of this pathway for disease was confirmed when a
tps1
mutant strain was found to be avirulent in both rabbits and mice. Furthermore, in the system of the invertebrate
C. elegans
, in which high in vivo temperature is no longer an environmental factor, attenuation in virulence was still noted with the
tps1
mutant, and this supports the hypothesis that the trehalose pathway in
C. neoformans
is involved in more host survival mechanisms than simply high-temperature stresses and glycolysis. These studies in
C. neoformans
and previous studies in other pathogenic fungi support the view of the trehalose pathway as a selective fungicidal target for use in antifungal development.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Immunology,Microbiology,Parasitology
Cited by
146 articles.
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