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Amino acids are among the earliest identified inducers of yeast-to-hyphal transitions in Candida albicans, an opportunistic fungal pathogen of humans. Here, we show that the morphogenic amino acids arginine, ornithine and proline are internalized and metabolized in mitochondria via a PUT1- and PUT2-dependent pathway that results in enhanced ATP production. Elevated ATP levels correlate with Ras1/cAMP/PKA pathway activation and Efg1-induced gene expression. The magnitude of amino acid-induced filamentation is linked to glucose availability; high levels of glucose repress mitochondrial function thereby dampening filamentation. Furthermore, arginine-induced morphogenesis occurs more rapidly and independently of Dur1,2-catalyzed urea degradation, indicating that mitochondrial-generated ATP, not CO2, is the primary morphogenic signal derived from arginine metabolism. The important role of the SPS-sensor of extracellular amino acids in morphogenesis is the consequence of induced amino acid permease gene expression, i.e., SPS-sensor activation enhances the capacity of cells to take up morphogenic amino acids, a requisite for their catabolism. C. albicans cells engulfed by murine macrophages filament, resulting in macrophage lysis. Phagocytosed put1-/- and put2-/- cells do not filament and exhibit reduced viability, consistent with a critical role of mitochondrial proline metabolism in virulence.

More information Original publication

DOI

10.1371/journal.pgen.1007976

Type

Journal article

Publication Date

2019-02-01T00:00:00+00:00

Volume

15

Keywords

Adenosine Triphosphate, Amino Acids, Animals, Candida albicans, Cyclic AMP, Cyclic AMP-Dependent Protein Kinases, Fungal Proteins, Humans, Hyphae, Macrophages, Mice, Mitochondria, Morphogenesis, Proline, Proline Oxidase, RAW 264.7 Cells, Signal Transduction, Virulence, ras Proteins