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Microbiology 147 (2001), 1961-1970
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Microbiology (2001), 147, 1961-1970.
© 2001 Society for General Microbiology


Genetics and Molecular Biology

Overexpression of a dominant-negative allele of YPT1 inhibits growth and aspartyl protease secretion in Candida albicans

Samuel A. Lee1,2, Yuxin Mao1, Zimei Zhang1 and Brian Wong1,2

Infectious Diseases Section, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, CT 06520, USA1
Infectious Diseases Section, VA Connecticut Healthcare System, 950 Campbell Ave, Bldg 8 (111-I), West Haven, CT 06516, USA2

Author for correspondence: Brian Wong. Tel: +1 203 937 3446. Fax: +1 203 937 3476. e-mail: brian.wong{at}yale.edu

To investigate the pre-Golgi secretion pathway in the pathogenic yeast Candida albicans, we cloned the C. albicans homologue of the Saccharomyces cerevisiae protein secretion gene YPT1. The C. albicans YPT1 ORF contained a 624 bp intronless ORF encoding a deduced protein of 207 aa and 2·3 kDa. This deduced protein was 77% identical to S. cerevisiae Ypt1 protein (Ypt1p) and it contained GTP-binding domains that are conserved among all known ras-like GTPases. Multicopy plasmids containing C. albicans YPT1 complemented the temperature-sensitive S. cerevisiae ypt1 (A136D) mutation. One chromosomal YPT1 allele in C. albicans CAI4 was readily disrupted by homologous gene targeting, but attempts to disrupt the second allele yielded no viable null mutants. Since this suggested that C. albicans YPT1 may be essential, a mutant ypt1 allele was constructed encoding the amino acid substitution analogous to the N121I substitution in a known trans-dominant inhibitor of S. cerevisiae Ypt1p. Next, a GAL1-regulated plasmid was used to express the mutant ypt1(N121I) allele in C. albicans CAI4. Ten of 11 transformants tested grew normally in glucose and poorly in galactose, and plasmid curing restored growth to wild-type levels. When these transformants were incubated in galactose, secretion of aspartyl proteinase (Sap) was inhibited and membrane-bound secretory vesicles accumulated intracellularly. These results imply that C. albicans YPT1 is required for growth and protein secretion, and they confirm the feasibility of using inducible dominant-negative alleles to define the functions of essential genes in C. albicans.

Keywords: Candida albicans, protein secretion, vesicle trafficking, YPT1

The GenBank accession number for the C. albicans YPT1 sequence reported in this paper is AF330211.




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