is an opportunistic human fungal pathogen that causes superficial fungal infections and lethal systemic infections. To colonize and establish infections, coordinates the expression of virulence and metabolic genes. Previous work showed that the homeodomain transcription factor Grf10 is required for formation of hyphae, a virulence factor. Here we report global gene expression analysis of a Δ strain using a DNA microarray and identify genes for adenylate biosynthesis ( genes), one-carbon metabolism, and a nucleoside permease (). Upregulation of these genes in response to adenine limitation required both Grf10 and the protein Bas1, as shown by quantitative real-time PCR (qRT-PCR). Phenotypic analysis showed that both mutants exhibited growth defects when grown in the absence of adenine, and the doubling time was slower for the Δ mutant. Bas1 is required for basal expression of these genes, whereas expression is more dependent upon Grf10. Disruption of led to only modest defects in hypha formation and weak attenuation of virulence in a systemic mouse model of infection, as opposed to the previously reported strong effects found in the Δ mutant. Our data are consistent with a model in which Grf10 coordinates metabolic effects on nucleotide metabolism by interaction with Bas1 and indicate that AMP biosynthesis and its regulation are important for growth and virulence. is a commensal and a common constituent of the human microbiota; however, it can become pathogenic and cause infections in both immunocompetent and immunocompromised people. exhibits remarkable metabolic versatility as it can colonize multiple body sites as a commensal or pathogen. Understanding how adapts metabolically to each ecological niche is essential for developing novel therapeutic approaches. Purine metabolism has been targeted pharmaceutically in several diseases; however, the regulation of this pathway has not been fully elucidated in . Here, we report how controls the AMP biosynthesis pathway in response to purine availability. We show that the lack of the transcription factors Grf10 and Bas1 leads to purine metabolic dysfunction, and this dysfunction affects the ability of to establish infections.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5541157PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/mSphere.00161-17DOI Listing

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Grf10, a homeodomain-containing transcription factor, regulates adenylate and one-carbon metabolism and morphogenesis in the human fungal pathogen Here, we identified functional domains and key residues involved in transcription factor activity using one-hybrid and mutational analyses. We localized activation domains to the C-terminal half of the Grf10 protein by one-hybrid analysis and identified motifs using bioinformatic analyses; one of the characterized activation domains (AD1) responded to temperature. The LexA-Grf10 fusion protein activated the reporter in an adenine-dependent fashion, and this activation was independent of Bas1, showing that the adenine limitation signal is transmitted directly to Grf10.

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is an opportunistic human fungal pathogen that causes superficial fungal infections and lethal systemic infections. To colonize and establish infections, coordinates the expression of virulence and metabolic genes. Previous work showed that the homeodomain transcription factor Grf10 is required for formation of hyphae, a virulence factor.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

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