Adaptive evolution of Candida albicans through modulating TOR signaling.

IF 5.1 1区 生物学 Q1 MICROBIOLOGY
mBio Pub Date : 2025-04-09 Epub Date: 2025-03-04 DOI:10.1128/mbio.03947-24
Yaling Zhang, Lianjuan Yang, Youzhi Zhao, Kang Xiong, Hao Cui, Tianxu Wang, Xiaoping Liu, Chang Su, Yang Lu
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Candida albicans stably colonizes humans but is a major fungal pathogen that occupies a wide range of divergent niches within the host. Rapid and effective adaptation to dynamic and contrasting host niches is associated with its pathogenicity. Recent studies have focused on genome evolution implicated in adaptive processes. Here, we demonstrate that modulation of TOR signaling is a mechanism underlying adaptive evolution in C. albicans. Clinical isolates of C. albicans exhibited enhanced commensal fitness in competition with the lab reference strain SC5314, which could be attributed to the diminished GlcNAc-responsive hypha-associated transcription in the gut. In vitro passaging of clinical isolates confers a reduction in TOR signaling, which is detrimental to fitness attributes in evolved strains, including stress response, antifungal drug tolerance, as well as in vivo commensal fitness and invasive infection. This phenomenon is observed independent of strain background and passaging environment. Importantly, inhibition of TOR signaling by rapamycin suppresses the fitness advantage observed in clinical isolates relative to their in vitro passaged derivatives. Thus, C. albicans undergoes rapid evolution via modulating TOR signaling that enables this fungus to adapt to diverse host niches.

Importance: Pathogens must be proficient at adapting to their surroundings to survive in the face of a changing microenvironment in the host and cause disease. This is particularly important for commensal-pathogenic organisms such as C. albicans as this fungus colonizes and infects mammalian hosts. Previous studies have focused on genome evolution such as aneuploidies, accumulation of point mutations, or loss of heterozygosity. Here, we demonstrate that C. albicans undergoes rapid adaptive evolution via modulating the TOR pathway. Alterations in TOR activity underlie some evolved traits with important consequences for both host adaptation and pathogenicity in C. albicans. Such mechanisms of adaptive evolution may be exploited by other organisms.

白色念珠菌通过调节TOR信号的适应性进化。
白色念珠菌稳定地定植于人类,但它是一种主要的真菌病原体,在宿主体内占据广泛的不同生态位。快速和有效地适应动态和对比寄主生态位与它的致病性有关。最近的研究集中在涉及适应过程的基因组进化上。在这里,我们证明了TOR信号的调节是白色念珠菌适应性进化的一种机制。临床分离的白色念珠菌在与实验室参考菌株SC5314的竞争中表现出更强的共生适应性,这可能归因于肠道中glcnac反应性菌丝相关转录的减少。临床分离物的体外传代会导致TOR信号的减少,这不利于进化菌株的适应性属性,包括应激反应、抗真菌药物耐受性、体内共生适应性和侵袭性感染。这种现象与应变背景和传代环境无关。重要的是,雷帕霉素对TOR信号的抑制抑制了临床分离株相对于其体外传代衍生物的适应性优势。因此,白色念珠菌通过调节TOR信号进行快速进化,使这种真菌能够适应不同的宿主生态位。重要性:病原体必须精通适应其周围环境,以便在面对宿主不断变化的微环境时生存并引起疾病。这对白色念珠菌等共生致病性生物尤其重要,因为这种真菌定植并感染哺乳动物宿主。以前的研究主要集中在基因组进化上,如非整倍体、点突变的积累或杂合性的丧失。在这里,我们证明了白色念珠菌通过调节TOR途径经历了快速的适应性进化。TOR活性的改变是一些进化性状的基础,对白色念珠菌的宿主适应和致病性都有重要影响。这种适应性进化的机制可能被其他生物利用。
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来源期刊
mBio
mBio MICROBIOLOGY-
CiteScore
10.50
自引率
3.10%
发文量
762
审稿时长
1 months
期刊介绍: mBio® is ASM''s first broad-scope, online-only, open access journal. mBio offers streamlined review and publication of the best research in microbiology and allied fields.
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