4.6 Article

Phenotypic Switching and Filamentation in Candida haemulonii, an Emerging Opportunistic Pathogen of Humans

期刊

MICROBIOLOGY SPECTRUM
卷 9, 期 3, 页码 -

出版社

AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1128/Spectrum.00779-21

关键词

Candida haemulonii; phenotypic switching system; filamentous growth; glycerol; temperature dependent

资金

  1. Chinese National Natural Science Foundation [32170194]
  2. Natural Science Foundation of Shanghai [20ZR1405900]
  3. Shanghai Science and Technology Committee [20DZ2272000]
  4. Chinese Academy of Engineering [2021-XY-40]

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This study reports three distinct phenotypes in C. haemulonii - white, pink, and filament - which differ in cellular and colony appearance, gene expression profiles, CuSO4 tolerance, and virulence. Cells can heritably and reversibly switch between white and pink cell types (primary switching system), while switching between pink and filamentous phenotypes is nonheritable and temperature-dependent (second switching system). Switching among the different morphological types may provide C. haemulonii with phenotypic plasticity for rapid responses to the changing host environment, contributing to its virulence.
Phenotypic plasticity is a common strategy adopted by fungal pathogens to adapt to diverse host environments. Candida haemulonii is an emerging multidrug-resistant human pathogen that is closely related to Candida auris. Until recently, it was assumed that C. haemulonii is incapable of phenotypic switching or filamentous growth. In this study, we report the identification of three distinct phenotypes in C. haemulonii: white, pink, and filament. The white and pink phenotypes differ in cellular size, colony morphology, and coloration on phloxine B- or CuSO4-containing agar. Switching between the white and pink cell types is heritable and reversible and is referred to as the primary switching system. The additional switch phenotype, filament, has been identified and exhibits obviously filamentous morphology when grown on glycerol-containing medium. Several unique characteristics of the filamentous phenotype suggest that switching from or to this phenotype poses as a second yeast-filament switching system. The yeast-filament switch is nonheritable and temperature-dependent. Low temperatures favor the filamentous phenotype, whereas high temperatures promote filament-yeast transition. We further demonstrated that numerous aspects of the distinct cell types differ in numerous biological aspects, including their high temperature response, specific gene expression, CuSO4 tolerance, secreted aspartyl protease (SAP) activity, and virulence. Therefore, transition among the three phenotypes could enable C. haemulonii to rapidly adapt to, survive, and thrive in certain host niches, thereby contributing to its virulence. IMPORTANCE The capacity to switch between distinct cell types, known as phenotypic switching, is a common strategy adopted by Candida species to adapt to diverse environments. Despite considerable studies on phenotypic plasticity of various Candida species, Candida haemulonii is considered to be incapable of phenotypic switching or filamentous growth. Here, we report and describe filamentation and three distinct phenotypes (white, pink, and filament) in C. haemulonii. The three cell types differ in cellular and colony appearance, gene expression profiles, CuSO4 tolerance, and virulence. C. haemulonii cells switch heritably and reversibly between white and pink cell types, which is referred to as the primary switching system. Switching between pink and filamentous phenotypes is nonheritable and temperature-dependent, representing a second switching system. As in other Candida species, switching among distinct morphological types may provide C. haemulonii with phenotypic plasticity for rapid responses to the changing host environment, and may contribute to its virulence.

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