Morschhäuser Joachim
Institute for Molecular Infection Biology, University of Würzburg, D-97080, Würzburg, Germany.
J Microbiol. 2016 Mar;54(3):192-201. doi: 10.1007/s12275-016-5628-4. Epub 2016 Feb 27.
The yeast Candida albicans is a member of the microbiota in the gastrointestinal and urogenital tracts of most healthy persons, but it can also cause symptomatic infections, especially in immunocompromised patients. During the life-long association with its human host, C. albicans generates genetically altered variants that are better adapted to changes in their environment. A prime example of this microevolution is the development of resistance to the commonly used drug fluconazole, which inhibits ergosterol biosynthesis, during antimycotic therapy. Fluconazole resistance can be caused by mutations in the drug target, by changes in the sterol biosynthesis pathway, and by gain-of-function mutations in transcription factors that result in the constitutive upregulation of ergosterol biosynthesis genes and multidrug efflux pumps. Fluconazole also induces genomic rearrangements that result in gene amplification and loss of heterozygosity for resistance mutations, which further increases drug resistance. These genome alterations may affect extended chromosomal regions and have additional phenotypic consequences. A striking case is the loss of heterozygosity for the mating type locus MTL in many fluconazole-resistant clinical isolates, which allows the cells to switch to the mating-competent opaque phenotype. This, in turn, raises the possibility that sexual recombination between different variants of an originally clonal, drug-susceptible population may contribute to the generation of highly fluconazole-resistant strains with multiple resistance mechanisms. The gain-of-function mutations in transcription factors, which result in deregulated gene expression, also cause reduced fitness. In spite of this, many clinical isolates that contain such mutations do not exhibit fitness defects, indicating that they have overcome the costs of drug resistance with further evolution by still unknown mechanisms.
白色念珠菌是大多数健康人胃肠道和泌尿生殖道微生物群的成员,但它也可引起有症状的感染,尤其是在免疫功能低下的患者中。在与人类宿主的长期关联过程中,白色念珠菌会产生基因改变的变体,这些变体更能适应环境变化。这种微观进化的一个主要例子是在抗真菌治疗期间对常用药物氟康唑产生耐药性,氟康唑可抑制麦角甾醇的生物合成。氟康唑耐药性可能由药物靶点的突变、甾醇生物合成途径的改变以及转录因子的功能获得性突变引起,这些突变导致麦角甾醇生物合成基因和多药外排泵的组成型上调。氟康唑还会诱导基因组重排,导致基因扩增和耐药性突变的杂合性丧失,从而进一步增加耐药性。这些基因组改变可能会影响扩展的染色体区域,并产生额外的表型后果。一个显著的例子是许多耐氟康唑的临床分离株中交配型位点MTL的杂合性丧失,这使得细胞能够转变为具有交配能力的不透明表型。反过来,这增加了一种可能性,即原本克隆的、对药物敏感的群体的不同变体之间的有性重组可能有助于产生具有多种耐药机制的高度耐氟康唑菌株。转录因子的功能获得性突变导致基因表达失调,也会导致适应性降低。尽管如此,许多含有此类突变的临床分离株并未表现出适应性缺陷,这表明它们通过仍未知的机制进一步进化克服了耐药性的代价。