Wysong D R, Christin L, Sugar A M, Robbins P W, Diamond R D
Evans Memorial Department of Clinical Research, Boston Medical Center, Massachusetts 02118, USA.
Infect Immun. 1998 May;66(5):1953-61. doi: 10.1128/IAI.66.5.1953-1961.1998.
Catalase plays a key role as an antioxidant, protecting aerobic organisms from the toxic effects of hydrogen peroxide, and in some cases has been postulated to be a virulence factor. To help elucidate the function of catalase in Candida albicans, a single C. albicans-derived catalase gene, designated CAT1, was isolated and cloned. Degenerate PCR primers based on highly conserved areas of other fungal catalase genes were used to amplify a 411-bp product from genomic DNA of C. albicans ATCC 10261. By using this product as a probe, catalase clones were isolated from genomic libraries of C. albicans. Nucleotide sequence analysis revealed an open reading frame encoding a protein of 487 amino acid residues. Construction of a CAT1-deficient mutant was achieved by using the Ura-blaster technique for sequential disruption of multiple alleles by integrative transformation using URA3 as a selectable marker. Resulting mutants exhibited normal morphology and comparable growth rates of both yeast and mycelial forms. Enzymatic analysis revealed an abundance of catalase in the wild-type strain but decreasing catalase activity in heterozygous mutants and no detectable catalase in a homozygous null mutant. In vitro assays showed the mutant strains to be more sensitive to damage by both neutrophils and concentrations of exogenous peroxide that were sublethal for the parental strain. Compared to the parental strain, the homozygous null mutant strain was far less virulent for mice in an intravenous infection model of disseminated candidiasis. Definitive linkage of CAT1 with virulence would require restoration of activity by reintroduction of the gene into mutants. However, initial results in mice, taken together with the enhanced susceptibility of catalase-deficient hyphae to damage by human neutrophils, suggest that catalase may enhance the pathogenicity of C. albicans.
过氧化氢酶作为一种抗氧化剂发挥着关键作用,保护需氧生物免受过氧化氢的毒性影响,并且在某些情况下被假定为一种毒力因子。为了帮助阐明过氧化氢酶在白色念珠菌中的功能,分离并克隆了一个源自白色念珠菌的单一过氧化氢酶基因,命名为CAT1。基于其他真菌过氧化氢酶基因高度保守区域设计的简并PCR引物,用于从白色念珠菌ATCC 10261的基因组DNA中扩增出一个411bp的产物。以该产物为探针,从白色念珠菌的基因组文库中分离出过氧化氢酶克隆。核苷酸序列分析揭示了一个编码487个氨基酸残基蛋白质的开放阅读框。通过使用URA3作为选择标记,利用URA - blaster技术通过整合转化对多个等位基因进行连续破坏,构建了CAT1缺陷型突变体。所得突变体表现出正常的形态,酵母型和菌丝型的生长速率相当。酶学分析表明,野生型菌株中过氧化氢酶含量丰富,杂合突变体中过氧化氢酶活性降低,而纯合缺失突变体中未检测到过氧化氢酶。体外试验表明,突变菌株对中性粒细胞和对亲本菌株亚致死浓度的外源性过氧化物的损伤更敏感。在播散性念珠菌病的静脉感染模型中,与亲本菌株相比,纯合缺失突变体菌株对小鼠的毒力要低得多。要确定CAT1与毒力的明确联系,需要将该基因重新导入突变体中恢复活性。然而,在小鼠中的初步结果,连同过氧化氢酶缺陷型菌丝对人中性粒细胞损伤的易感性增加,表明过氧化氢酶可能增强白色念珠菌的致病性。