AI Article Synopsis

  • The fungal pathogen Candida albicans can switch from a unicellular yeast form to a multicellular hyphal form, where only the tip cell divides while others stay in the G(1) phase.
  • Hgc1, a protein specific to hyphal growth, is crucial for this process, being found mainly in the dividing apical cells and undergoing rapid degradation at the same time.
  • The transcript for HGC1 shows dynamic regulation throughout the cell cycle, indicating that its expression is tightly controlled during hyphal growth, particularly in the apical cells.

Article Abstract

The human fungal pathogen Candida albicans can undergo a morphological transition from a unicellular yeast growth form to a multicellular hyphal growth form. During hyphal growth, cell division is asymmetric. Only the apical cell divides, whereas subapical cells remain in G(1), and cell surface growth is highly restricted to the tip of the apical cell. Hgc1, a hypha-specific, G(1) cyclin-like protein, is essential for hyphal development. Here, we report, using indirect immunofluorescence, that Hgc1 is preferentially localized to the dividing apical cells of hyphae. Hgc1 protein is rapidly degraded in a cell cycle-independent manner, and the protein turnover likely occurs in both the apical and the subapical cells of hyphae. In addition to rapid protein turnover, the HGC1 transcript is also dynamically regulated during cell cycle progression in hyphal growth. It is induced upon germ tube formation in early G(1); the transcript level is reduced during the G(1)/S transition and peaks again around the G(2)/M phase in the subsequent cell cycles. Transcription from the HGC1 promoter is essential for its apical cell localization, as Hgc1 no longer exhibits preferential apical localization when expressed under the MAL2 promoter. Using fluorescence in situ hybridization, the HGC1 transcript is detected only in the apical cells of hyphae, suggesting that HGC1 is transcribed in the apical cell. Therefore, the preferential localization of Hgc1 to the apical cells of hyphae results from the dynamic temporal and spatial control of HGC1 expression.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1797949PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/EC.00380-06DOI Listing

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