Affiliation:
1. Department of Clinical Pharmacy and Translational Science, College of Pharmacy, University of Tennessee Health Sciences Center, Memphis, Tennessee, USA
2. Institute of Life Science, Swansea University Medical School, Swansea, Wales, United Kingdom
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Inactivation of sterol Δ
5,6
-desaturase (Erg3p) in the prevalent fungal pathogen
Candida albicans
is one of several mechanisms that can confer resistance to the azole antifungal drugs. However, loss of Erg3p activity is also associated with deficiencies in stress tolerance, invasive hyphal growth, and attenuated virulence in a mouse model of disseminated infection. This may explain why relatively few
erg3
-deficient strains have been reported among azole-resistant clinical isolates. In this study, we examined the consequences of Erg3p inactivation upon
C. albicans
pathogenicity and azole susceptibility in mouse models of mucosal and disseminated infection. While a
C. albicans
erg3
Δ/Δ mutant was unable to cause lethality in the disseminated model, it induced pathology in a mouse model of vaginal infection. The
erg3
Δ/Δ mutant was also more resistant to fluconazole treatment than the wild type in both models of infection. Thus, complete loss of Erg3p activity confers azole resistance but also niche-specific virulence deficiencies. Serendipitously, we discovered that loss of azole-inducible
ERG3
transcription (rather than complete inactivation) is sufficient to confer
in vitro
fluconazole resistance, without compromising
C. albicans
stress tolerance, hyphal growth, or pathogenicity in either mouse model. It is also sufficient to confer fluconazole resistance in the mouse vaginal model, but not in the disseminated model of infection, and thus confers niche-specific azole resistance without compromising
C. albicans
pathogenicity at either site. Collectively, these results establish that modulating Erg3p expression or activity can have niche-specific consequences on both
C. albicans
pathogenicity and azole resistance.
IMPORTANCE
While conferring resistance to the azole antifungals
in vitro
, loss of sterol Δ
5,6
-desaturase (Erg3p) activity has also been shown to reduce
C. albicans
pathogenicity. Accordingly, it has been presumed that this mechanism may not be significant in the clinical setting. The results presented here challenge this assumption, revealing a more complex relationship between Erg3p activity, azole resistance,
C. albicans
pathogenicity, and the specific site of infection. Most importantly, we have shown that even modest changes in
ERG3
transcription are sufficient to confer azole resistance without compromising
C. albicans
fitness or pathogenicity. Given that previous efforts to assess the importance of
ERG3
as a determinant of clinical azole resistance have focused almost exclusively on detecting null mutants, its role may have been grossly underestimated. On the basis of our results, a more thorough investigation of the contribution of the
ERG3
gene to azole resistance in the clinical setting is warranted.
Funder
HHS | NIH | National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology