Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2181490 Fungal Genetics and Biology 2008 12 Pages PDF
Abstract

Aspergillosis is a disease determined by various factors that influence fungal growth and fitness. A conserved signal transduction cascade linking environmental stress to amino acid homeostasis is the Cross-Pathway Control (CPC) system that acts via phosphorylation of the translation initiation factor eIF2 by a sensor kinase to elevate expression of a transcription factor. Ingestion of Aspergillus fumigatus conidia by macrophages does not trigger this stress response, suggesting that their phagosomal microenvironment is not deficient in amino acids. The cpcC gene encodes the CPC eIF2α kinase, and deletion mutants show increased sensitivity towards amino acid starvation. CpcC is specifically required for the CPC response but has limited influence on the amount of phosphorylated eIF2α. Strains deleted for the cpcC locus are not impaired in virulence in a murine model of pulmonary aspergillosis. Accordingly, basal expression of the Cross-Pathway Control transcriptional activator appears sufficient to support aspergillosis in this disease model.

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