Affiliation:
1. Department of Molecular Genetics and Microbiology, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, North Carolina 27710
Abstract
ABSTRACTCalcineurin is a conserved calcium/calmodulin-dependent serine/threonine-specific protein phosphatase that acts in cell stress responses. Calcineurin is essential for growth at 37°C and for virulence of the human fungal pathogenCryptococcus neoformans, but its substrates remain unknown. The C2 domain-containing, phospholipid-binding protein Cts1 was previously identified as a multicopy suppressor of a calcineurin mutation inC. neoformans. Here we further characterize the function of Cts1 and the links between Cts1 and calcineurin. GFP-Cts1 localizes to cytoplasmic puncta and colocalizes with the endosomal marker FM4-64. Thects1Δ mutant shows a distinct FM4-64 staining pattern, suggesting involvement of Cts1 in endocytic trafficking. In large budded cells, GFP-Cts1 localizes transiently at the mother bud neck, as a single ring that undergoes contraction. mCherry-Cts1 colocalizes with the GFP-tagged calcineurin catalytic subunit Cna1 at sites of mRNA processing at 37°C, suggesting that Cts1 and calcineurin function coordinately during thermal stress. GFP-Cts1 exhibits slower electrophoretic mobility for cells grown at 37°C than for cells grown at 24°C, and the shift to a higher molecular weight is more pronounced in the presence of the calcineurin inhibitor FK506.In vitrotreatment with calf intestinal alkaline phosphatase (CIP) restores faster electrophoretic mobility to GFP-Cts1, suggesting that Cts1 is phosphorylated at 37°C and may be dephosphorylated in a calcineurin-dependent manner. mCherry-Cts1 also coimmunoprecipitates with GFP-Cna1, with greater complex formation at 37°C than at 24°C. Taken together, these findings support potential roles for Cts1 in endocytic trafficking, mRNA processing, and cytokinesis and suggest that Cts1 is a substrate of calcineurin during high-temperature stress responses.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,General Medicine,Microbiology
Cited by
14 articles.
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