4.6 Article

Multifactorial Mechanisms of Tolerance to Ketoconazole in Candida albicans

Journal

MICROBIOLOGY SPECTRUM
Volume 9, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1128/Spectrum.00321-21

Keywords

antifungal tolerance; CDR1; calcineurin; Candida albicans; Hsp90; ketoconazole; V-ATPase; VMA11; antifungal resistance

Categories

Funding

  1. National Nature Science Foundation of China [81402978, 81673478, 81872910, 82020108032]
  2. Shanghai Key Basic Research Project [19JC1414900]
  3. Superintendent Foundation of the 960 Hospital of PLA [2017ZD01]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

This study demonstrates that tolerance to ketoconazole in Candida albicans is regulated by multiple factors, including temperature, growth medium composition, known efflux pump genes, Hsp90, calcineurin components, and vacuolar ATPase subunits. The study highlights the importance of physiological and genetic mechanisms in determining drug tolerance, as well as the complex interaction between tolerance and resistance.
Candida albicans is a prevalent opportunistic human fungal pathogen for which treatment is limited to only four main classes of antifungal drugs, with the azole and echinocandin classes being used most frequently. Drug tolerance, the ability of some cells to grow slowly in supra-MIC drug concentrations, decreases the number of available treatment options. Here, we investigated factors affecting tolerance and resistance to ketoconazole in C. albicans. We found both temperature and the composition of growth medium significantly affected tolerance with little effect on resistance. In deletion analysis of known efflux pump genes, CDRI was partially required for azole tolerance, while CDR2 and MDR1 were dispensable. Tolerance also required Hsp90 and calcineurin components; CRZ1, which encodes a transcription factor downstream of calcineurin, was required only partially. Deletion of VMA11, which encodes a vacuolar ATPase subunit, and concanamycin A, a V-ATPase inhibitor, abolished tolerance, indicating the importance of vacuolar energy transactions in tolerance. Thus, tolerance to ketoconazole is regulated by multiple factors, including physiological and genetic mechanisms. IMPORTANCE Due to the ever-expanding range of invasive medical procedures and treatments, invasive fungal infections now pose a serious global threat to many people living in an immunocompromised status. Like humans, fungi are eukaryotic, which significantly limits the number of unique antifungal targets; the current arsenal of antifungal agents is limited to just three frontline drug classes. Additional treatment complexities result from the development of drug tolerance and resistance, which further narrows therapeutic options; however, the difference between tolerance and resistance remains largely unknown. This study demonstrates that tolerance and resistance are regulated by multiple genetic and physiological factors. It is prudent to note that some factors affect tolerance only, while other factors affect both tolerance and resistance. The complex underlying mechanisms of these drug responses are highlighted by the fact that there are both shared and distinct mechanisms that regulate tolerance and resistance.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available