Affiliation:
1. Michael Smith Laboratories, Department of Microbiology and Immunology, and Faculty of Land and Food Systems, The University of British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Iron acquisition is critical for the ability of the pathogenic yeast
Cryptococcus neoformans
to cause disease in vertebrate hosts. In particular, iron overload exacerbates cryptococcal disease in an animal model, defects in iron acquisition attenuate virulence, and iron availability influences the expression of major virulence factors.
C. neoformans
acquires iron by multiple mechanisms, including a ferroxidase-permease high-affinity system, siderophore uptake, and utilization of both heme and transferrin. In this study, we examined the expression of eight candidate ferric reductase genes and their contributions to iron acquisition as well as to ferric and cupric reductase activities. We found that loss of the
FRE4
gene resulted in a defect in production of the virulence factor melanin and increased susceptibility to azole antifungal drugs. In addition, the
FRE2
gene was important for growth on the iron sources heme and transferrin, which are relevant for proliferation in the host. Fre2 may participate with the ferroxidase Cfo1 of the high-affinity uptake system for growth on heme, because a mutant lacking both genes showed a more pronounced growth defect than the
fre2
single mutant. A role for Fre2 in iron acquisition is consistent with the attenuation of virulence observed for the
fre2
mutant. This mutant also was defective in accumulation in the brains of infected mice, a phenotype previously observed for mutants with defects in high-affinity iron uptake (e.g., the
cfo1
mutant). Overall, this study provides a more detailed view of the iron acquisition components required for
C. neoformans
to cause cryptococcosis.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Immunology,Microbiology,Parasitology
Cited by
75 articles.
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