Affiliation:
1. Institute of Microbiology, University Hospital Lausanne, Lausanne, Switzerland
Abstract
ABSTRACT
The ABC transporter genes
CDR1
and
CDR2
can be upregulated in
Candida albicans
developing resistance to azoles or can be upregulated by exposing cells transiently to drugs such as fluphenazine. The
cis
-acting drug-responsive element (DRE) present in the promoters of both genes and necessary for their upregulation contains 5′-CGG-3′ triplets that are often recognized by transcriptional activators with Zn(2)-Cys(6) fingers. In order to isolate regulators of
CDR1
and
CDR2
, the
C. albicans
genome was searched for genes encoding proteins with Zn(2)-Cys(6) fingers. Interestingly, three of these genes were tandemly arranged near the mating locus. Their involvement in
CDR1
and
CDR2
upregulation was addressed because a previous study demonstrated a link between mating locus homozygosity and azole resistance. The deletion of only one of these genes (orf19.3188) was sufficient to result in a loss of transient
CDR1
and
CDR2
upregulation by fluphenazine and was therefore named
TAC1
(transcriptional activator of
CDR
genes). Tac1p has a nuclear localization, and a fusion of Tac1p with glutathione
S
-transferase could bind the
cis
-acting regulatory DRE in both the
CDR1
and the
CDR2
promoters.
TAC1
is also relevant for azole resistance, since a
TAC1
allele (
TAC1-2
) recovered from an azole-resistant strain could trigger constitutive upregulation of
CDR1
and
CDR2
in an azole-susceptible laboratory strain. Transcript profiling experiments performed with a
TAC1
mutant and a revertant containing
TAC1-2
revealed not only
CDR1
and
CDR2
as targets of
TAC1
regulation but also other genes (
RTA3
,
IFU5
, and
HSP12
) that interestingly contained a DRE-like element in their promoters. In conclusion,
TAC1
appears to be the first
C. albicans
transcription factor involved in the control of genes mediating antifungal resistance.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,General Medicine,Microbiology
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