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Vol. 13, Issue 8, 2732-2746, August 2002
Department of Molecular Genetics and Microbiology, State University of New York, Stony Brook, New York 11794-5222
Submitted January 8, 2002; Revised May 17, 2002; Accepted May 23, 2002| |
ABSTRACT |
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The septin proteins function in the formation of septa,
mating projections, and spores in Saccharomyces
cerevisiae, as well as in cell division and other processes in
animal cells. Candida albicans septins were examined in
this study for their roles in morphogenesis of this multimorphic,
opportunistically pathogenic fungus, which can range from round budding
yeast to elongated hyphae. C. albicans green fluorescent
protein labeled septin proteins localized to a tight ring at the
bud and pseudohyphae necks and as a more diffuse array in emerging germ
tubes of hyphae. Deletion analysis demonstrated that the C.
albicans homologs of the S. cerevisiae CDC3 and
CDC12 septins are essential for viability. In contrast,
the C. albicans cdc10
and cdc11
mutants were viable but displayed conditional defects in cytokinesis,
localization of cell wall chitin, and bud morphology. The mutant
phenotypes were not identical, however, indicating that these septins
carry out distinct functions. The viable septin mutants could be
stimulated to undergo hyphal morphogenesis but formed hyphae with
abnormal curvature, and they differed from wild type in the selection
of sites for subsequent rounds of hyphal formation. The
cdc11
mutants were also defective for invasive growth
when embedded in agar. These results further extend the known roles of
the septins by demonstrating that they are essential for the proper
morphogenesis of C. albicans during both budding and
filamentous growth.
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INTRODUCTION |
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The septins comprise a family of proteins that are involved in
dynamic membrane events in a wide range of eukaryotic organisms (reviewed in Cooper and Kiehart, 1996
; Longtine et
al., 1996
; Field and Kellogg, 1999
; Trimble, 1999
; Gladfelter
et al., 2001
; Kartmann and Roth, 2001
). The majority of
septin studies have been carried out in the budding yeast
Saccharomyces cerevisiae, where four septins, Cdc3p, Cdc10p,
Cdc11p, and Cdc12p, have been shown to make up a ring of 10-nm
filaments on the inner surface of the plasma membrane at the bud neck
(Byers and Goetsch, 1976a
; Longtine et al., 1996
; Frazier
et al., 1998
; Longtine et al., 1998
).
Temperature-sensitive mutants in the corresponding genes arrest with
elongated buds that fail to undergo cytokinesis (Hartwell, 1971
; Adams
and Pringle, 1984
). Consequently, these proteins became known as
septins for their suspected role in forming the septum between the
mother and daughter cells. Additionally, these mutants fail to form
normal chitin rings in the cell wall at the bud neck and display a
defect in the axial budding pattern (Slater et al., 1985
;
Flescher et al., 1993
; Chant et al., 1995
;
DeMarini et al., 1997
). The formation of the septin ring
apparently requires interdependent interactions between the septin
proteins. Shifting any of the septin mutants to the nonpermissive
temperature resulted not only in the in the disappearance of the
mutated septin but also of the other septins from the bud neck and the
loss of the 10-nm filaments (Byers and Goetsch, 1976b
; Haarer and
Pringle, 1987
; Ford and Pringle, 1991
; Kim et al., 1991
).
Deletion of CDC3 or CDC12 is lethal.
Interestingly, deletion mutants lacking CDC10 or
CDC11 are viable only at low temperatures and display
phenotypes similar to the temperature-sensitive septin mutants
(Flescher et al., 1993
; Fares et al., 1996
;
Frazier et al., 1998
). One additional bud neck-localized
septin, Shs1p/Sep7p, was identified later; deletion of this gene caused
mild defects in cytokinesis (Carroll et al., 1998
; Mino
et al., 1998
).
The septins have also been implicated in morphogenetic processes other
than budding in S. cerevisiae. In particular, septins have
been shown to function in mating projection formation, where, similar
to budding, the septins form a ring at the neck of the polarized growth
that forms a conjugation bridge to connect the mating cells (Ford and
Pringle, 1991
; Kim et al., 1991
; Giot and Konopka, 1997
).
The septins do not seem to form a tight ring structure, however, and
10-nm filaments have not been detected at the neck of mating
projections. The septins were also implicated in sporulation by the
observation that two S. cerevisiae septins, SPR3
and SPR28, are expressed only in cells undergoing meiosis
and sporulation (Ozsarac et al., 1995
; De Virgilio et
al., 1996
; Fares et al., 1996
). Interestingly, the
septins seem to be broadly distributed in the prospore membrane and are
not restricted to a tight ring (De Virgilio et al., 1996
;
Fares et al., 1996
; Tachikawa et al., 2001
).
The high degree of homology between septin proteins, usually >26%
identity over their entire length, has led to the identification of
septins in a wide range of eukaryotic cells from yeast to human, with
the exception of plants. Interestingly, septin proteins in multicellular organisms seem to function not only in cytokinesis (Neufeld and Rubin, 1994
; Fares et al., 1995
; Kinoshita
et al., 1997
; Nguyen et al., 2000
) but also in
other processes. For example, septins have been found to associate with
the sec6/sec8 exocyst complex in rats (Hsu et al., 1998
) and
also with synaptic vesicles in mice (Beites et al., 1999
),
suggesting they might participate directly in vesicle trafficking and
regulated secretion. Regardless of where and when the septins are
expressed, however, they usually seem to be membrane associated and
have been hypothesized to function as a network for organizing or
regulating cellular events.
To better understand the roles of septins in diverse morphological
processes, we investigated septin function in the pathogenic yeast
Candida albicans. C. albicans was targeted for analysis because it is capable of switching from the round yeast form to other
morphologies, including various elongated pseudohyphal forms and a
highly elongated hyphal form that has not been observed in S. cerevisiae. The regulation of C. albicans morphogenesis is also significant because the ability to switch between budding and
filamentous forms is an important virulence determinant for the
pathogenicity of C. albicans. Septins were thought to be
present in C. albicans because electron microscopy
studies showed that 10-nm filaments could be observed at sites of
septation (Soll and Mitchell, 1983
). Subsequent DNA hybridization
studies identified apparent homologs of the S. cerevisiae
CDC3 and CDC10 genes (DiDomenico et al.,
1994
), and recently a green fluorescent protein (GFP) fusion of the
C. albicans homolog of Cdc3p was localized to the bud neck
(Gale et al., 2001
; Gerami-Nejad et al., 2001
).
Antibodies against the S. cerevisiae Cdc11p also detected a
putative C. albicans Cdc11p homolog that was present in
budding, pseudohyphal, and hyphal growth phases (Sudbery, 2001
).
Therefore, we carried out an analysis of the seven septins that were
identified by the C. albicans genome sequence. These studies
indicate that in addition to their role in cytokinesis, septins
function in guiding proper hyphal morphogenesis in C. albicans.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Strains and Media
The C. albicans strains used in this study (Table
1) are derivatives of BWP17 (Wilson
et al., 1999
). The open reading frame (ORF) of each of the
seven septins was deleted through successive transformations with
polymerase chain reaction (PCR)-generated constructs that contained
either ARG4 or HIS1 flanked by short regions of
homology to the gene of interest (Wilson et al., 1999
). The
extents of the deletion mutations are as follows: for CDC3, codons 28-352 were removed, ORF is 378 codons; CDC10,
26-464 of 489 codons; CDC11,
28-376 of 402 codons;
CDC12,
27-365 of 370 codons; SEP7,
32-583 of 615 codons; SPR3,
35-458 of 491 codons; and
SPR28,
27-370 of 397 codons. Plasmid constructs for
GFP-tagged septins or gene deletion restoration were introduced by
targeted integrated at the particular septin locus, with the exception
of CDC10-GFP constructs, which were integrated randomly into
the genome.
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The C. albicans strains were propagated on either YPD or
minimal defined medium (Sherman, 1991
) plus 50 mg/l uridine unless indicated otherwise. Hyphal growth was induced by the addition of 20%
bovine calf serum (BCS) to YPD, or in Lee's medium (Buffo et
al., 1984
). For agar-embedded hyphal assays, Spider medium (10 g
of Bacto yeast nitrogen base, 10 g of mannitol, 2 g of
K2HPO4, and 13.5 g of
agar per liter), GlcNAc (6.7 g of Bacto yeast nitrogen base, 2.5 mM
N-acetyl-D-glucosamine, 15 g of
agar per liter), and 4% serum agar (40 ml of BCS, 15 g of agar
per liter) were all supplemented with 20 mg/l histidine, 20 mg/l
arginine, and 80 mg/l uridine.
Primers, Plasmids, and PCR
All primer sequences are listed in Table
2 as online supplemental material.
pAW-CDC10-Res, used to restore a single copy of CDC10 to the
cdc10 deletion strain, was constructed by amplifying from
BWP17, a 1.8-kb segment of CDC10 flanked by AatII
and SacII ends by using primers 5'CDC10-RESTORE and
3'CDC10-RESTORE and ligating into pGEM-URA3 (Wilson et al.,
1999
). pAW-CDC11-Res, for restoration of CDC11 to the
cdc11 deletion strain, was created essentially the same way
from a 2.5-kb segment of CDC11. pAW-CDC10-GFP, used to
generate GFP-tagged Cdc10p from the endogenous CDC10
promoter, was constructed from pUC19 as follows. GFP was amplified from pUC19 containing yEGFP (Cormack et al., 1997
) with
SacI and EcoRI ends from primers GFP3-5' and
GFP3-3' and cloned into pUC19. A 1.4-kb fragment of URA3
was amplified by primers URA3-5' and URA3-3' from Sc5314 (Fonzi and
Irwin, 1993
) and cloned into the GFP-containing pUC19 by using
AatII sites provided by the primers, resulting in plasmid
pAW-REMI. A 1.5-kb segment of CDC10 was then amplified from
BWP17 with primers 5'CDC10-BAM and 3'CDC10-ORF, which provided BamHI and SacI sites to clone CDC10 in
frame with GFP. pAW-CDC12-GFP was created similarly. Primers
5'CDC12-BAM and 3'CDC12-ORF were used to amplify a 1.6-kb segment of
CDC12 from BWP17 with BamHI and SacI
ends, which was then ligated into pAW-REMI. A similar plasmid with
CDC3 in frame with GFP was also constructed (Martin and
Konopka, unpublished data). pAW-ADH-CDC10-GFP, for expression of
GFP-tagged Cdc10p from the constitutive overexpression promoter ADH1, was created by amplifying GFP from pAW-REMI with
primers 5'GFP-XHO and 3'GFP-MLU and ligation of the GFP into the
URA3 plasmid YPB1-ADHpt (Bailey et al., 1996
) at
MluI and XhoI sites. A
BamHI-SacI fragment containing the
CDC10 ORF was then generated by PCR of BWP17 DNA with
5'CDC10-ORF and 3'CDC10-ORF and ligated into the ADH-GFP plasmid at its
BglII and SacI sites.
To perform gene disruptions, PCR mixtures contained ~10 ng of
alkaline lysis prep DNA (pGEM-URA3, pGEM-HIS1, or
pRS-ARG4
SpeI for gene deletion [Wilson et
al., 1999
] or pBME101 for the test of gene essentiality [Enloe
et al., 2000
]) as template, 0.2 µm each dNTP, 1× PCR
buffer minus Mg2+ (Invitrogen, Carlsbad,
CA), 1 mM magnesium chloride, 40 pmol of each primer, 50 ng of bovine
serum albumin, and 2.5 U of Taq DNA polymerase in a 100-µl
reaction. Amplification was performed as follows: 94°C for 5 min
followed by 25 cycles of 93°C for 30 s, 53°C for 60 s,
and 72°C for 3 min. Primers used for the generation of disruption
constructs are labeled with DR or FIX extensions (see online
supplemental Table 2). The DR series bears homology to both the
plasmids and the target gene, and the FIX series pair to the last few
bases of the corresponding DR primers to ensure that the resulting PCR
product is completely amplified. Primers labeled with ORF, DET, and
UNIV extensions were used for the detection of the gene disruptions
with ARG4, HIS1, or UAU1 (test of gene essentiality) by using bead-bashed genomic DNA (Hoffman and Winston, 1987
) as template and the same reaction conditions described above.
C. albicans Transformations
Transformations were performed essentially as described
previously (Wilson et al., 1999
). Briefly, overnight
cultures were diluted 1:500 in 100 ml of medium and grown ~8 h at
30°C to an OD660 of 0.8-1.0. Cells were
harvested by centrifugation, washed in 1/10 volume LATE buffer (0.1 M
lithium acetate, 10 mM Tris-HCl pH 7.5, and 1 mM EDTA) and resuspended
in 1/50 volume of LATE buffer. Then 100 µl of the cell suspension was
mixed with 50 µg of sheared salmon sperm DNA and either 95 µl of a
disruption construct PCR reaction or 5 µg of linearized plasmid DNA.
Polyethylene glycol 4000 (40%) in LATE buffer was mixed into the
reaction, which was then incubated at 30°C for 12-15 h. The cells
were heat shocked for 1 h at 42°C, pelleted, and washed in YPD
medium before being resuspended in 200 µl of YPD and plated on
selective medium.
Microscopy
Cells were examined using differential interference contrast optics (DIC) for morphological analysis or fluorescence microscopy to visualize GFP, 4,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole (DAPI), or Calcofluor. GFP localization and analysis were performed on cultures in logarithmic growth without fixation (unless DAPI staining was necessary) under the fluorescein isothiocyanate channel. DAPI staining was performed on formaldehyde-fixed cells by using 5 µg/ml in Prolong Antifade mounting medium (Molecular Probes, Eugene, OR) and viewed under UV. Fixation did not exceed 15 min in cells where visualization of GFP was also necessary, but typically ranged from 1 to 3 h for DAPI alone. Chitin staining was performed by adding 0.2 µg/ml Calcofluor White directly to the medium during the last 10-20 min of growth and viewing the cells without fixation under UV. Actin staining was performed on formaldehyde-fixed cells by using 5 U/sample rhodamine phalloidin (Molecular Probes). All microscopy was performed on an Olympus BH-2 microscope. Images were captured with a black-and-white AxioCam (Carl Zeiss, Thornwood, NY) run by Openlab 3.0.1 software from Improvision (Lexington, MA). Image pseudocoloring and merging were performed using the Openlab 3.0.1 software. For quantitation of phenotypes, at least 100 (but more commonly 300-800) cells were counted from two to five independent experiments to generate the percentages reported.
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RESULTS |
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Seven Septin Genes in C. albicans
Seven septin genes are known in S. cerevisiae:
CDC3, CDC10, CDC11, CDC12,
SEP7, SPR3, and SPR28 (see
INTRODUCTION). Sequences homologous to all seven were found in C. albicans by using a tBLASTn search against genomic sequence data
and are listed in Figure 1A. Comparison
of the predicted proteins showed that sequence conservation was
greatest for the four septins involved in cytokinesis in S. cerevisiae (Cdc3p, Cdc10p, Cdc11p, and Cdc12p), which ranged from
48 to 69% identity in sequence to the C. albicans homolog. The relationship for the sporulation-specific septins
Spr3p and Spr28p was somewhat lower at 33% identity. A multiple
sequence alignment was used to construct a phylogenetic tree that
confirmed the relatedness of the protein sequences (Figure 1B). The
C. albicans sequence showing homology to S. cerevisiae Spr28p seems to contain a shift in reading frame
between the regions of similarity and thus was omitted from the tree
analysis.
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Distinct Septin Localization during Budding, Pseudohyphal, and Hyphal Growth
A CDC10-GFP fusion was integrated into wild-type strain BWP17 to observe subcellular septin localization during budding, pseudohyphal, and hyphal growth stages. Because fluorescence was weak in the early stages of hyphal growth, the GFP fusion was also expressed from the ADH1 promoter to enhance visibility. The pattern of Cdc10-GFP localization, both spatially and temporally, was similar in cells expressing the fusion gene from the CDC10 or ADH1 promoter (our unpublished data). In addition, overexpression of the septin-GFP fusion did not cause any apparent aberrant phenotype under any conditions tested.
The overall pattern of septin localization observed during budding in
C. albicans was similar to what has previously been seen in
S. cerevisiae (Haarer and Pringle, 1987
; Ford and Pringle, 1991
; Kim et al., 1991
). As shown in Figure
2A, cells grown under conditions that
promote budding exhibited septin-GFP localization as a tight ring that
appeared just before bud emergence. The bud then grew out through the
septin ring, which appeared as a doublet around the time of nuclear
division. Shortly after the ring structure divided, the GFP decreased
in intensity, indicating breakdown of the septin ring, concurrent with
mother/daughter cell separation. Similar results were obtained with
strains expressing Cdc3-GFP and Cdc12-GFP (see below; Figures 4 and 5).
These data, together with previous analysis of Cdc3p (Gale et
al., 2001
; Gerami-Nejad et al., 2001
) and Cdc11p
(Sudbery, 2001
), indicate that C. albicans septins are
conserved in localization as well as in sequence with the S. cerevisiae septins.
A similar pattern of neck ring localization of septins was observed in
cells induced to undergo pseudohyphal growth (Figure 2B). Pseudohyphae
are described as chains of connected buds that can vary in shape from
small round cells to highly elongated cells, but that all bear distinct
constrictions at septation sites (Odds, 1988
). Just as in budding,
pseudohyphal cells displayed a ring of Cdc10-GFP from which an
elongated bud structure emerged. A similar observation was made by
immunostaining with anti-Cdc11p antibody (Sudbery, 2001
). However, as
the pseudohyphae continued to elongate, new septin rings were detected
at the growing tip in intervals of 10-15 µm from older rings, which
were still present toward the base. This differed from budding cells in
which old rings disassembled before the formation of new ones. Older
rings in the pseudohyphae eventually appeared as doublets, coincident with the appearance of divided nuclei on either side, and then a septum
formed between the rings (our unpublished data). After septation, the
septin rings began to fade, and the mother cells could be separated
easily by mechanical force.
The pattern of septin localization in the emerging germ tube of cells
induced to undergo hyphal growth differed from that of budding or
pseudohyphal cells. A faint mesh or cap-like structure was observed
initially at the site of germ tube emergence, not the distinct ring
observed for the other growth forms (Figure 2, C and D). This differs
from a previous report of a ring that was observed by immunostaining
with antibody against the S. cerevisiae Cdc11p (Sudbery,
2001
). As the germ tube elongated, the Cdc10-GFP at the neck continued
to appear more diffuse and less intense than the rings observed in buds
or pseudohyphae. Faint, diffuse GFP fluorescence could also be observed
at the tip in the early stages of germ tube growth. The cells
displaying this pattern of septin localization corresponded to true
hyphae because they lacked the distinct constriction at the neck that
was observed for pseudohyphae, instead displaying either a straight or
conical attachment to the mother cells.
Later in the hyphal growth, the Cdc10-GFP appeared as a tight ring
structure in the germ tube 10-15 µm from the mother cell, at a site
that marked the position of subsequent septum formation (Figure 2C,
right). Similar results have been reported for Cdc3p and Cdc11p (Gale
et al., 2001
; Sudbery, 2001
). Nuclear division occurred
across the septin ring, which then appeared as a doublet coincident
with a visible septum observable by DIC microscopy and a band of chitin
observed by Calcofluor staining (our unpublished data). As the hypha
continued to elongate by tip growth, a new ring appeared 10-20 µm
from the previous one. Nuclear division ensued, one nucleus migrated
across the ring, and then a septum formed. This pattern continued along
the length of the hypha. The nucleus from the mother cell always
returned to the main body of the mother cell, and nuclei from hyphal
compartments ultimately came to rest in the center of each cell (our
unpublished data; Sudbery, 2001
). Interestingly, older septin rings
disassembled slowly, especially on the mother cell side of the doublet.
Septin rings in various stages of assembly, division, and disassembly could be observed simultaneously along the length of a single hypha. In
contrast to pseudohyphae, hyphal cells were not easily separated.
The distinct septin patterns seemed likely to be useful for rapid
discrimination between hyphae and pseudohyphae in a population of
cells. Indeed, CDC10-GFP cells grown under
pseudohyphal-inducing conditions displayed primarily (95%) the
expected tight rings of septins that formed an apparent doublet at the
neck (Figure 2F). In contrast, cells induced with serum showed
primarily the hyphal pattern of diffuse neck fluorescence. A few of the
serum-induced cells showed the pseudohyphal pattern, but most of these
are likely to correspond to cells that were budding when induced.
Budding cells evaginate the germ tube from the growing bud instead of the mother cell (our unpublished data; Hazan et al., 2002
).
The budding cells maintained the septin rings that had formed for bud
emergence, but no ring structure was observed where the hypha emerged
from the bud (Figure 2E). Not counting cells with obvious bud swellings
at the base of the hypha, ~4% of the serum-induced cells still
seemed to have a septin ring that was reminiscent of budding or
pseudohyphal cells. This was either due to a small bud having been
converted into a hypha or to a low percentage of pseudohyphal growth in
the serum conditions. In contrast, cells grown in Lee's medium to
induce hyphal growth showed 86% hyphal pattern and 14% pseudohyphal
pattern. The lower efficiency of hyphal induction in Lee's medium is
consistent with serum being one of the strongest known inducers of
hyphal growth.
Deletion of Septins Results in Aberrant Budding Phenotypes
Deletion analysis (see MATERIALS AND METHODS) was used to
determine which septins are important for growth and morphogenesis in
C. albicans. Individual septin open reading frames were
disrupted by replacement of the septin coding sequences with
ARG4 or HIS1 in the auxotrophic strain BWP17
(Wilson et al., 1999
). Deletion of SEP7,
SPR3, or SPR28 resulted in no observable
phenotype under any conditions tested. This is consistent with reverse
transcription-PCR results in which the expression of these sequences
was not detectable during any growth phase (our unpublished data). In
contrast, deletion of CDC10 or CDC11 caused
strong phenotypes, and CDC3 and CDC12 seem to be
essential genes.
The majority of cdc10
cells appeared to be wild type when
grown at 30°C (Figure 3D), but when
shifted to 37°C, 34% of the cells were enlarged and elongated, and
often remained attached end to end in a pseudohyphal-like pattern
(Figure 3E). At 42°C, 94% of the cells became even more elongated,
and many buds formed as club-like structures (Figure 3F).
Interestingly, the mutants did not show an overall growth rate defect,
even though the elongated, connected buds could not generally be
separated by zymolyase digestion, indicating a frequent failure of
cytokinesis. This contrasts with the S. cerevisiae cdc10
mutant, which exhibits slow growth and lysis (Flescher et
al., 1993
; Fares et al., 1996
; DeMarini et al., 1997
; Frazier et al., 1998
). The phenotype of the
cdc10
C. albicans cells was corrected by reintroduction
of CDC10 or CDC10-GFP under control of the
endogenous promoter as well as by CDC10-GFP overexpressed
from the ADH1 promoter (Figure 3, G-I; our unpublished
data).
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The cdc11
mutant exhibited a phenotype that was
observable at any temperature. Colonies on a plate appeared rough and
asymmetrical compared with the smooth, waxy appearance of wild-type or
cdc10
colonies. In liquid culture at 30°C, 91% of the
cdc11
cells proved to be abnormal; they varied in size
and were often found growing in clusters that suggested a failure of
separation of the buds from a mother cell exhibiting an axial budding
pattern (Figure 3J). At elevated temperatures (Figure 3, K and L), the
cells appeared to grow in both axial clusters of buds as well as the
end-to-end polar budding arrangement observed for cdc10
mutants. Unlike the cdc10
cells, however,
cdc11
mutants mainly formed round cells and generally did
not display elongated buds at 42°C (Figure 3L). Like the
cdc10
mutant, the cdc11
cells were
generally nonseparable, yet were easily propagated at all temperatures
despite their phenotype. The mutant phenotype was complemented by
integration of a single copy of CDC11 under control of the
endogenous promoter (Figure 3, M-O), but not overexpressed CDC10 (our
unpublished data).
Both the cdc10
and cdc11
mutants
displayed multiple nuclei in the enlarged cells or compartments,
further indicating that the defect is in cell separation, not the cell
cycle itself. Actin localization also appeared normal; cells displayed
punctate patches in growing buds and filamentous actin cables in mother
cells (our unpublished data).
Homozygous deletion mutants of CDC3 and CDC12
could not be isolated, suggesting that they may be essential, as are
the homologs in S. cerevisiae. Therefore, a gene
essentiality test was performed (Enloe et al., 2000
).
Briefly, a UAU1 (ura3-ARG4-ura3) construct was
used to delete one target gene allele. Medium lacking arginine and
uracil was then used to select for cells that had undergone two
recombination events: 1) replacement of the second allele by the
UAU1 construct and 2) a subsequent popout event at one UAU1 that results in a functional URA3 gene.
However, for both CDC3 and CDC12, all candidate
colonies (derived from three independent UAU1 deletion
strains in each case) still contained a wild-type copy of the gene,
presumably due to triploidy of the relevant chromosome (Enloe et
al., 2000
), indicating that both CDC3 and CDC12 are indeed essential.
Septin Mutants Form Unstable Septin Rings
The localizations of two other septins were examined in the
cdc10 and cdc11 deletion mutants by integrating
GFP-tagged CDC3 and CDC12 under the control of
their endogenous promoters. In S. cerevisiae, the septin
ring is typically disrupted when one septin is mutated or deleted (see
INTRODUCTION), but this is not always the case in C. albicans. At 30 and 37°C, both the cdc10
and
cdc11
mutants showed visible septin ring structures at
the necks of growing buds (Figure 4, B,
C, E, F, H, I, K, and L). However, when grown at 42°C for 12-15 h,
cdc10
strains did not (<3%) show detectable Cdc3-GFP
(Figure 4N) or Cdc12-GFP (Figure 4Q) localization. In contrast, the
cdc11
mutants clearly displayed septin rings at the
expected positions in the majority of cells (91%) at 42°C (Figure 4,
O and R; our unpublished data for Cdc10-GFP). However, these rings
sometimes appeared more punctate or diffuse than at lower temperatures.
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A time course was conducted to analyze the behavior of the septin rings
in the cdc10
and cdc11
mutants after a
shift from 30 to 42°C. Within 10 min, the localized Cdc12-GFP signal
was dramatically reduced in the cdc10
mutant (Figure
5E), and by 30 min only 1% of the cells
displayed a visible septin ring, and these rings were markedly reduced
in intensity (Figure 5H). The septin rings did not reappear upon
further incubation (Figure 5, K and N). Surprisingly,
cdc11
cells also displayed a dramatic reduction in the
frequency and intensity of Cdc12-GFP rings during the first 30 min
after the shift to 42°C (Figure 5, F and I). The loss of the rings
was accompanied by an increase in punctate GFP localization in the
cytoplasm, a pattern not seen in the cdc10
or wild-type
cells (compare Figure 5, G-I).
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On extended incubation at 42°C, the cdc11
cells
recovered Cdc12-GFP rings, concomitant with a loss of the cytoplasmic
GFP speckles (Figure 5, L and O; see also Figure 4, O and R). By 4 h the majority of the cdc11
cells had visible rings at
the junction of new bud growth. Similar results were observed with
Cdc3-GFP in both mutants and with Cdc10-GFP in cdc11
cells (our unpublished data). Thus, the absence of Cdc10p results in a
complete defect in ring maintenance and assembly at 42°C, whereas
absence of Cdc11p results in an initial reduction in septin ring
stability upon shift to 42°C. However, rapid acclimation to the new
growth temperature allows septin rings to reform in the absence of Cdc11p.
Septin Mutants Display Aberrant Chitin Localization
Despite their formation of septin rings, cdc10
and
cdc11
strains are not normal for chitin localization.
Wild-type cells displayed chitinous bud scars, detectable by Calcofluor
staining, at the poles (Figure 6, A and
D). In contrast, cdc10
cells, despite their apparently
normal budding at 30°C, did not exhibit visible bud scars (Figure
6B). At 37°C, where their septin defect is more apparent, the
cdc10
cells displayed a lack of septum formation between
cell compartments and/or a mislocalization of chitin within growing
compartments (Figure 6E). These phenomena were even more apparent in
the cdc11
cells grown at 30 or 37°C (Figure 6, C and
F). These results indicate that the septin rings that form in the
absence of Cdc10p or Cdc11p are not sufficient to correctly localize
the chitin synthase machinery.
|
Septin Mutants Show Altered Germ Tube and Hyphal Growth Patterns on a Solid Substrate
Because budding morphology was altered in the cdc10
and cdc11
mutants at 37°C, the temperature at which
filamentation takes place, we examined whether these mutants would also
display defects in hyphal growth. By 2.5 h postinduction, the
majority of both wild-type (Figure 7A)
and mutant (Figure 7, B and C) cells displayed significant germ tube or
hyphal growth. However, the mutant strains displayed several
characteristics that distinguished them from the wild type. The hyphae
on wild-type cells generally grew out perpendicular to the parental
cell and tracked straight across the surface of the agar (Figure 7A).
In contrast, the majority of the septin mutant cells showed various
degrees of curvature along the length of the hyphae, with 48-52%
exhibiting a >45° curve compared with 12% for wild type (Figure 7,
B and C). These curves originated either at the site of germ tube
emergence or further out in the germ tube.
|
Interestingly, wild-type cells displayed a switching phenomenon that was captured during time-lapse photography of the serum induction. Early in the induction, cells would often begin and then abort one or more short germ tubes before finally extending the last projection into elongated hyphal growth (Figure 7D). In contrast, the septin mutants displayed this phenomenon less frequently and only rarely formed the multiple protruberances that were commonly observed in wild-type cells (Figure 7, E and F). At later times, wild-type cells formed a second hypha at a seemingly random position relative to the original hypha, with only 15% displaying the second hypha adjacent to the first (Figure 7G). In contrast, both septin mutants usually launched the second hypha from a position proximal to the first (62-74%) and often directly adjacent to it (Figure 7, H and I).
To investigate further the different growth patterns of the wild-type
and mutant hyphae, we examined septin and chitin localization. Cdc12p
localization at early times of induction for both mutant and wild-type
cells was inconclusive due to a weak signal and high background in
serum-containing media. Later, when the germ tubes septated, Cdc12-GFP
rings were clearly visible along the growing hyphae in both the
wild-type (Figure 8D) and mutant strains (Figure 8, E and F). Similar results were observed with Cdc3-GFP in
both mutants and Cdc10-GFP in cdc11
cells. Thus, as in
budding cells, hyphal cdc10
and cdc11
cells
were not detectably defective in localization of the other septins
during growth at 37°C. Also, as in budding cells, the mutants showed
abnormal chitin localization (Figure 8, H and I), often displaying more
irregular deposition in the wall as compared with wild type (Figure 8,
G-I). This staining also revealed that the walls of the
cdc11
hyphae, in particular, were not as smooth or
parallel as the wild type. Taken together, the results indicate that
the septin mutants are not globally defective for serum-induced hyphal
growth, but they carry out this morphogenesis in an altered pattern
compared with wild-type cells.
|
cdc11
Cells Display Reduced Filamentation in Agar
The septin deletion strains were also tested for invasive growth
when embedded in agar. The cdc10
strain appeared to be
similar to wild type. In contrast, the cdc11
mutant
showed reduced invasive growth in all media tested. cdc11
colonies tended to have a solid disk-like appearance in agar, whereas
other strains appeared as fuzzy orbs radiating out in all directions.
This difference was not due to a general growth defect but instead
reflected a reduced ability to penetrate the agar. The defect was most
pronounced in YPD medium, where microscopic analysis showed that there
were fewer and shorter extensions of growth into the agar radiating out
from cdc11
colonies (Figure
9E, inset). Colonies of other strains
embedded in YPD displayed longer invasions of growth that were made up
primarily of elongated cells or chains of oval cells (Figure 9D,
inset). In Spider medium, wild-type and cdc10
colonies formed long extensions of filamentous growth that appeared thick due to
lateral budding in the form of both elongated and round budded cells
(Figure 9A). The cdc11
strain was completely lacking in
the thick invasive branches, instead displaying only a limited amount
of what seemed to be pseudohyphal growth (Figure 9B). This trend was
also observed in
N-acetyl-D-glucosamine and 4% BCS
(our unpublished data). Integration of a single copy of
CDC11 reverted the invasion defects (Figure 9, C and F).
Thus, Cdc11p seems to be important for the ability to carry out
invasive growth.
|
| |
DISCUSSION |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Originally identified for their role in cytokinesis in S. cerevisiae, septins have since been found to play a broader role in other morphogenetic events in yeast, flies, and mammals. In this
study, we analyzed the roles of septins in the pathogenic yeast
C. albicans, which has the capacity to grow with a variety of morphologies. The ability of C. albicans to switch
between diverse morphologies is regulated, in part, by interaction with host cells and is thought to be one of the most important factors governing its fitness as a pathogen. Analysis of the C. albicans genome sequence identified seven open reading frames with
strong similarity to the septin protein family. The four septins
encoded by CDC3, CDC10, CDC11, and
CDC12 assembled into a ring at the future site of septation
during budding, pseudohyphal, and hyphal growth of C. albicans. Interestingly, the homologs of the sporulation-specific septins of S. cerevisiae (Spr3 and Spr28) displayed the
least similarity to their counterparts (Figure 1). This greater degree of divergence correlates with the failure to detect sporulation of
C. albicans. It has been proposed, based on comparisons with genes involved in the sexual cycle of S. cerevisiae, that
C. albicans may undergo meiosis in an alternative manner
(Tzung et al., 2001
).
Cdc10p and Cdc11p Display Distinct Functional Properties during C. albicans Budding
Analysis of the septin mutants identified interesting differences
between C. albicans and S. cerevisiae. Whereas a
S. cerevisiae cdc10
strain is reported to show an
abnormal morphology at any temperature, the majority of the C. albicans cdc10
cells appeared to be wild type at 30°C or
below, but were defective at elevated temperature. At 42°C, these
cells were not able to localize other septins to the bud neck, probably
contributing to the more severe phenotype observed at this temperature.
S. cerevisiae septin mutants at elevated temperature display
a similar elongated bud morphology and fail to maintain localization of
other septins at the bud neck, but they also do not remain viable
(Haarer and Pringle, 1987
; Ford and Pringle, 1991
; Kim et
al., 1991
; Frazier et al., 1998
; Robinson et
al., 1999
). Surprisingly, deletion of CDC10 in C. albicans does not strongly affect growth rate or viability even at
42°C, indicating that cytokinesis must occur at some, albeit lower,
frequency. Thus, C. albicans differs from S. cerevisiae in that the cells can continue to proliferate
successfully in the absence of detectable septins rings.
C. albicans cdc10
and cdc11
mutants
were similar in that both displayed defects in cytokinesis and aberrant
chitin localization. However, they differed in that cdc11
cells displayed a high degree of budding from a site adjacent to the
previous bud (axial budding), whereas cdc10
cells
primarily formed long chain of cells connected end to end (polar
budding). Additionally, cdc11
cells formed fewer of the
extensively elongated buds at 42°C that were commonly seen for
cdc10
cells. The difference between these mutants may relate to the fact that cdc11
cells retained localization
of other septins to a ring at the bud neck at 42°C. On the other hand, the difference could also be due to a differential ability of the
Cdc10p and Cdc11p septins to interact with other proteins that are
recruited to the bud neck, a possibility that is consistent with
genetic evidence for some septin-binding proteins in S. cerevisiae (Barral et al., 1999
; Okuzaki and Nojima,
2001
).
Septins Influence C. albicans Hyphal Morphogenesis
Septin localization in germ tubes was distinct from that observed
during budding or pseudohyphal growth. Instead of forming a well
defined ring, the septins localized in a diffuse array at the plasma
membrane domain where germ tube growth was initiated. This array was
more difficult to detect than the ring, which may account for
discrepancies in previous reports (Gale et al., 2001
; Sudbery, 2001
). Analysis of septin gene expression suggests that there
is not a hyphal-specific septin gene (DiDomenico et al., 1994
; our unpublished data). Thus, this change in septin localization is apparently due to changes in septin regulation during hyphal growth.
The distinction between these different patterns of septin localization
allow hyphal and pseudohphal growth to be distinguished at the earliest
stages, before cell morphology can be assessed, or later when the
overall morphologies can be quite similar. At later stages, when the
first septum began to form within the germ tube, the septins were
observed to form a tight ring structure similar to that observed in
budding or pseudohyphal cells. Interestingly, the septin rings formed
during hyphal growth did not appear to disassemble after septation as
rapidly as in budding cells, and often the ring on the daughter side
disappeared more quickly than that on the mother cell side. This
difference may reflect a delay in cell cycle progression of the older
cells near the base of the hypha. Mother cells have been reported to
swell their vacuoles to contribute their cytoplasmic constituents to
assist the more rapid tip growth and may therefore need more time to
initiate a new division cycle (Gow and Gooday, 1984
).
Deletion analysis demonstrated that the full set of septins is not
vital to hyphal morphogenesis in that the cdc10
and
cdc11
mutants were not grossly defective in serum-induced
hyphal growth, although some defects were apparent. The hyphae of the
mutant cells typically grow with a greater degree of curvature, which may reflect a defect in cell wall construction, as suggested also by
flaws in septum formation and a nonhomogenous distribution of cell wall
chitin. In addition, the mutants differed from wild type in selection
of the sites for secondary germ tube emergence. In contrast to the
seemingly random selection of sites in wild-type cells, the mutants
often selected sites that were directly adjacent to the previous hypha.
This was particularly evident for the cdc11
strain, which
also showed a bias toward an axial budding pattern, suggesting that the
selection of sites for buds and germ tubes both involve
septin-dependent mechanisms. The cdc11
cells were also
defective in undergoing filamentous growth when embedded in agar.
Formation of Small Germ Tube-like Protuberances
Time-lapse studies showed that serum treatment caused wild-type
cells to form a series of short, germ-tube like protuberances at
seemingly random locations before extending one protuberance into full
hyphal growth. The septins seem to play a role in this process, because
the cdc10
and cdc11
mutants displayed a
lower frequency of this switching behavior. A similar type of small protuberances may have been observed for a special set of conditions involving induction with
N-acetyl-D-glucosamine (Hubbard
et al., 1985
). Although to our knowledge this behavior has
not been reported previously for C. albicans cells induced
with serum, this effect does not seem to be limited to the time-lapse
studies. Small protuberances can be observed at sites distinct from the
main germ tube both in some of the previously published micrographs of
serum-induced cells (Herrero et al., 1999
) and in cells from
liquid cultures that we have analyzed (our unpublished data). Several
factors suggest that this switching phenomenon may play a role in
Candida pathogenesis. In particular, these structures could
play a role analogous to that of the primary germ tube of certain plant
pathogens, such as Blumeria graminis. The conidia of
B. graminis initially form a small primary germ tube to help
adhere to the plant epidermal layer and then form an elongated
secondary germ tube that invades deeper into the plant tissue
(Heitefuss, 2001
). Because C. albicans germ tubes are
reported to display increased adherence to mammalian cells (Hostetter,
1996
; Calderone, 1998
; Gale et al., 1998
; Staab et
al., 1999
), these short protuberances could play an important role
in mediating the adherence to host cells during an infection.
Mechanisms of Septin Action
Studies on the role of the septin ring during budding have led to
the model that the septins act as a scaffold to recruit proteins to the
neck region to ensure proper bud morphogenesis and cytokinesis.
Additional studies indicate that the septins can also function as a
boundary that helps to maintain polarized growth in the bud by
restricting actin and other proteins from the mother cell (Barral
et al., 2000
; Takizawa et al., 2000
). Studies on
mammalian cells have further indicated that septins can contribute to
regulated secretion (Kartmann and Roth, 2001
). These mechanisms for
septin action are not mutually exclusive and may all contribute to bud
morphogenesis and cytokinesis. In addition, these models for septin
action are consistent with what was observed in the analysis of septin
mutants in C. albicans. For example, septins localize to the
sites of germ tube formation and may act to promote proper hyphal
morphogenesis by recruiting proteins such as Int1p, which has been
shown to bind to septins and is necessary for hyphal morphogenesis
under some conditions (Gale et al., 1998
, 2001
). Septins may
also function to define the shape of the hyphae by acting as a boundary
domain that helps to restrict actin to the growing tip. Cdc10-GFP was
often observed at the leading edge of germ tubes (Figure 2), and a
failure to fine-tune the site of actin polarization could account for
the greater degree of curvature in hyphae formed by septin mutants (Figure 7). In addition, because morphogenesis in yeast is primarily due to deposition of secretory vesicles at specific sites in the plasma
membrane, septins could play a direct role in directing early tip
morphogenesis by differentially regulating secretion during bud and
hyphal emergence.
| |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
|---|
We thank Drs. Dana Davis (University of Minnesota, St. Paul, MN) and Aaron Mitchell (Columbia University) for strains, plasmids, and invaluable advice, Drs. Aaron Neiman and Neta Dean (SUNY Stony Brook) for useful suggestions, and Dr. Alistair Brown (University of Aberdeen, Aberdeen, Scotland) and Stephen Martin (SUNY Stony Brook) for plasmids. This work was supported by grant R01 AI47837 from the National Institutes of Health (to J.B.K.). Digital camera equipment was obtained through a Targeted Research Opportunity Grant from the Stony Brook School of Medicine.
| |
FOOTNOTES |
|---|
* Corresponding author. E-mail address: james.konopka{at}sunysb.edu.
Online version of this article contains
supplemental tables. Online version available at www.molbiolcell.org.
Article published online ahead of print. Mol. Biol. Cell 10.1091/mbc.E02-01-0013. Article and publication date are at www.molbiolcell.org/cgi/doi/10.1091/mbc.E02-01-0013.
| |
ABBREVIATIONS |
|---|
Abbreviations used: BCS, bovine calf serum; DIC, differential interference contrast; GFP, green fluorescent protein; YPD, yeast peptone dextrose media.
| |
REFERENCES |
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