Candida albicans Sfl2, a temperature‐induced transcriptional regulator, is required for virulence in a murine gastrointestinal infection model

2011 
Many transcriptional regulators play roles in morphogenesis of the human pathogen Candida albicans. Recently, Sfl2, a sequence homolog of C. albicans Sfl1, has been shown to be required for hyphal development. In this report, we show that, like Sfl1, Sfl2 could complement the phenotypes of the Saccharomyces cerevisiae sfl1 mutant, and green fluorescent protein-tagged Sfl2 localized in the nuclei of both yeast and hyphal cells in C. albicans, reflecting its role as a transcriptional regulator. In C. albicans, SFL2 expression was induced at a high growth temperature (37 degrees C) at both transcriptional and translational levels. The deletion of SFL2 impaired filamentation at a high temperature, whereas the overexpression of SFL2 promoted filamentous growth at a low temperature. Sfl2-activated hyphal development needs the existence of Efg1 and Flo8 under aerobic conditions. Thus, in contrast to Sfl1, which represses filamentation, Sfl2 acts as an activator of filamentous growth in C. albicans. Functional analysis of chimeric Sfl proteins demonstrated that the opposite actions of C. albicans Sfl1 and Sfl2 were mainly mediated by their heat shock factor domains. Furthermore, the deletion of SFL2 attenuated virulence in a mouse model of gastrointestinal colonization and dissemination, indicating that Sfl2 is important for virulence in the gastrointestinal model of candidiasis. Our results provide new insights into Sfl2 functions in C. albicans morphogenesis and pathogenesis.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    49
    References
    17
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []