Department of Microbiology, University of Georgia, Athens, GA 30602, USA.
Public Health Research Institute Center, New Jersey Medical School - Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey, Newark, NJ 07103, USA.
Curr Biol. 2020 Apr 20;30(8):1387-1396.e5. doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2020.01.081. Epub 2020 Feb 27.
Cryptococcus neoformans is a global human fungal pathogen that causes fatal meningoencephalitis in mostly immunocompromised individuals. During pulmonary infection, cryptococcal cells form large polyploid cells that exhibit increased resistance to host immune attack and are proposed to contribute to the latency of cryptococcal infection. These polyploid titan cells can generate haploid and aneuploid progeny that may result in systemic infection. What triggers cryptococcal polyploidization and how ploidy reduction is achieved remain open questions. Here, we discovered that Cryptococcus cells polyploidize in response to genotoxic stresses that cause DNA double-strand breaks. Intriguingly, meiosis-specific genes are activated in C. neoformans and contribute to ploidy reduction, both in vitro and during infection in mice. Cryptococcal cells that activated their meiotic genes in mice were resistant to specific genotoxic stress compared to sister cells recovered from the same host tissue but without activation of meiotic genes. Our findings support the idea that meiotic genes, in addition to their conventional roles in classic sexual reproduction, contribute to adaptation of eukaryotic cells that undergo dramatic genome changes in response to genotoxic stress. The discovery has additional implications for evolution of sexual reproduction and the paradox of the presence of meiotic machinery in asexual species. Finally, our findings in this eukaryotic microbe mirror the revolutionary discoveries of the polyploidization and meiosis-like ploidy reduction process in cancer cells, suggesting that the reversible ploidy change itself could provide a general mechanism for rejuvenation to promote individual survival in response to stress.
新生隐球菌是一种全球性的人类真菌病原体,主要使免疫功能低下的个体患上致命性脑膜脑炎。在肺部感染期间,新生隐球菌细胞形成大的多倍体细胞,表现出对宿主免疫攻击的增强抗性,并被认为有助于新生隐球菌感染的潜伏。这些多倍体巨细胞可以产生单倍体和非整倍体后代,可能导致全身感染。新生隐球菌多倍体化的触发因素以及如何实现倍性降低仍然是悬而未决的问题。在这里,我们发现隐球菌细胞对导致 DNA 双链断裂的遗传毒性应激反应而发生多倍体化。有趣的是,减数分裂特异性基因在新生隐球菌中被激活,并有助于在体外和在感染小鼠期间降低倍性。与从同一宿主组织中回收但未激活减数分裂基因的姐妹细胞相比,在小鼠中激活其减数分裂基因的新生隐球菌细胞对特定的遗传毒性应激具有抗性。我们的研究结果支持这样一种观点,即减数分裂基因除了在经典有性生殖中的传统作用外,还有助于对经历剧烈基因组变化以响应遗传毒性应激的真核细胞的适应。这一发现对有性生殖的进化和在无性物种中存在减数分裂机制的悖论具有额外的意义。最后,我们在这种真核微生物中的发现反映了癌细胞中多倍体化和类似减数分裂的倍性降低过程的革命性发现,这表明可逆的倍性变化本身可以为个体在应激反应中促进个体生存提供一种普遍的再生机制。