Fu Y, Filler S G, Spellberg B J, Fonzi W, Ibrahim A S, Kanbe T, Ghannoum M A, Edwards J E
St. John's Cardiovascular Research Center, Department of Medicine, Harbor-UCLA Research and Education Institute, Torrance, California 90502, USA.
Infect Immun. 1998 May;66(5):2078-84. doi: 10.1128/IAI.66.5.2078-2084.1998.
Adherence to the endothelial cell lining of the vasculature is probably a critical step in the egress of Candida albicans from the intravascular compartment. To identify potential adhesins that mediate the attachment of this organism to endothelial cells, a genomic library from C. albicans was used to transform a nonadherent strain of Saccharomyces cerevisiae. The population of transformed yeasts was enriched for highly adherent clones by repeated passages over endothelial cells. One clone which exhibited a fivefold increase in endothelial cell adherence, compared with S. cerevisiae transformed with vector alone, was identified. This organism also flocculated. The candidal DNA fragment within this adherent/flocculent organism was found to contain a single 1.8-kb open reading frame, which was designated CAD1. It was found to be identical to AAF1. The predicted protein encoded by CAD1/AAF1 contained features suggestive of a regulatory factor. Consistent with this finding, immunoelectron microscopy revealed that CAD1/AAF1 localized to the cytoplasm and nucleus but not the cell wall or plasma membrane of the transformed yeasts. Because yeasts transformed with CAD1/AAF1 both flocculated and exhibited increased endothelial cell adherence, the relationship between adherence and flocculation was examined. S. cerevisiae expressing either of two flocculation phenotypes, Flo1 or NewFlo, adhered to endothelial cells as avidly as did yeasts expressing CAD1/AAF1. Inhibition studies revealed that the flocculation phenotype induced by CAD1/AAF1 was similar to Flo1. Thus, CAD1/AAF1 probably encodes a regulatory protein that stimulates endothelial cell adherence in S. cerevisiae by inducing a flocculation phenotype. Whether CAD1/AAF1 contributes to the adherence of C. albicans to endothelial cells remains to be determined.
黏附于脉管系统的内皮细胞衬里可能是白色念珠菌从血管内间隙逸出的关键步骤。为了鉴定介导该菌附着于内皮细胞的潜在黏附素,使用白色念珠菌的基因组文库转化酿酒酵母的非黏附菌株。通过在内皮细胞上反复传代,富集转化酵母群体中的高黏附性克隆。鉴定出一个克隆,与仅用载体转化的酿酒酵母相比,其对内皮细胞的黏附增加了五倍。该菌也会絮凝。发现这个黏附/絮凝菌体内的念珠菌DNA片段包含一个单一的1.8 kb开放阅读框,命名为CAD1。发现它与AAF1相同。CAD1/AAF1编码的预测蛋白具有提示调节因子的特征。与此发现一致,免疫电子显微镜显示CAD1/AAF1定位于转化酵母的细胞质和细胞核,而非细胞壁或质膜。由于用CAD1/AAF1转化的酵母既会絮凝又表现出内皮细胞黏附增加,因此研究了黏附与絮凝之间的关系。表达两种絮凝表型(Flo1或NewFlo)之一的酿酒酵母与表达CAD1/AAF1的酵母一样强烈地黏附于内皮细胞。抑制研究表明,CAD1/AAF1诱导的絮凝表型与Flo1相似。因此,CAD1/AAF1可能编码一种调节蛋白,通过诱导絮凝表型来刺激酿酒酵母中的内皮细胞黏附。CAD1/AAF1是否有助于白色念珠菌黏附于内皮细胞仍有待确定。