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Eukaryotic Cell, January 2006, p. 180-191, Vol. 5, No. 1
1535-9778/06/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/EC.5.1.180-191.2006
Copyright © 2006, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Department of Pathobiology, University of Illinois, Urbana, Illinois 61802
Received 1 September 2005/ Accepted 7 November 2005
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-estradiol, ethynyl estradiol, and estriol on several C. albicans strains at concentrations ranging from 105 to 1010 M. The addition of 17-ß-estradiol or ethynyl estradiol to C. albicans cells caused an increase in the number of cells forming germ tubes and an increase in germ tube length in a dose- and strain-dependent manner. The addition of 17-
-estradiol or estriol did not have a significant effect on germ tube formation by the cultured cells. Exposure to exogenous estrogens did not significantly change the biomass of any C. albicans culture tested. The transcriptional profile of estrogen-treated C. albicans cells showed increased expression of CDR1 and CDR2 across several strain-estrogen concentration-time point combinations, suggesting that these genes are the most responsive to estrogen exposure. Analysis of strain DSY654, which lacks the CDR1 and CDR2 coding sequences, showed a significantly decreased number of germ tube-forming cells in the presence of 17-ß-estradiol. PDR16 was the most highly up-regulated gene in strain DSY654 under these growth conditions. The cell biology and gene expression data from this study led to a model that proposes how components of the phospholipid and sterol metabolic pathways may interact to affect C. albicans germ tube formation and length. |
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Risk factors for VVC include douching, antibiotic therapy, and diabetes (6, 19, 37, 44). Conditions and practices that elevate estrogen levels have also been noted as risk factors for developing disease (37, 46). The elevated estrogen levels present during pregnancy result in both increased vaginal colonization with C. albicans (3, 14, 37) and increased risk of VVC (37). Exogenous estrogens such as oral contraceptives are also associated with increased C. albicans colonization (37) and VVC (46). Elevated estrogen levels are also associated with the use of hormone replacement therapy. In one study, VVC was observed in 26% of postmenopausal women using estrogen in hormone replacement therapy compared to disease in 4% of women who were not using estrogen (45).
The association between elevated estrogen and incidence of C. albicans colonization or vaginal disease may be due to the effect of estrogen on the host, on the fungal cells, or both. The effect of estrogen exposure on C. albicans has received attention in the literature over the years. Cell biological observations of the effects of estrogen on C. albicans have focused primarily on measurements of germ tube formation and length, and on culture biomass. The concentration of estrogen used in some of these studies is above physiological levels. The addition of 107 M 17-ß-estradiol to a culture of yeast forms increased percent germination and germ tube length (30). Percent germination responded in a dose-dependent manner with concentrations ranging from 106 to 108 M (30). Another group observed increased germination upon exposure to 17-ß-estradiol, although the response was greater as estrogen concentrations decreased from 106 to 108 M (49). One common feature of these studies was that they were conducted in growth medium containing serum to induce germ tube formation. The undefined and variable composition of serum complicates dissection of the estrogenic effect. A chemically defined growth medium was used to observe that the addition of 106 M estrogen led to an increase in biomass of a culture grown for 7 days (22).
The desire to understand the effect of estrogen exposure on C. albicans also led to a series of biochemical studies to identify a C. albicans estrogen receptor. This work resulted in the isolation and purification of Ebp1p (estrogen binding protein 1), which binds 17-ß-estradiol with high affinity (38, 43). EBP1 is similar to the Saccharomyces cerevisiae gene that encodes the oxidoreductase old yellow enzyme (OYE). Subsequent experimentation showed that Ebp1p is localized to vacuoles (35, 51) and that 17-ß-estradiol weakly inhibits the activity of Ebp1p (7, 35). Ebp1p binds a variety of compounds in addition to 17-ß-estradiol and mediates an aromatization and reduction reaction (7).
More recently, the effects of estrogen on C. albicans have been studied at the molecular level (16, 28). Expression of CDR1 and CDR2, which encode multidrug transporters of the ABC family (31, 41), is up-regulated in the presence of estrogen at various concentrations from 103 to 109 M (16, 28, 31, 50). Cdr1p can specifically transport estradiol in an energy-dependent manner (32). An AP-1 recognition element was noted upstream of the multidrug resistance gene CDR1 in C. albicans (39). The presence of this recognition sequence raised the possibility that expression of CDR1 is influenced by host estrogen (39).
Recently, two new drug responsive elements (DREs) were identified upstream of CDR1 and CDR2. The DRE consensus sequence is 5' CGGA(A/T)ATCGGATATTTTTTTT 3' (16). While this consensus sequence is found uniquely upstream of CDR1 and CDR2, a more redundant form of the sequence, 5' WCGGWWWWCGGWWW 3' (W is A or T), is found in the promoters of IFU5, RTA3, and HSP12 (13, 16). DRE-containing genes are expressed in response to exposure to antifungal drugs and steroids. Further investigation identified Tac1p as the transcriptional activator that binds to DREs (13). Another cis-acting regulatory element of CDR1 responsive to 17-ß-estradiol and another steroid is the steroid-response element SRE2 (28). Collectively, these results suggest that estradiol might be involved in C. albicans drug resistance.
The goal of the studies presented here is to better define the effect of estrogen exposure on C. albicans. This work revisits measurements of germ tube formation and length, and culture biomass using chemically defined growth media. Various concentrations of estrogenic compounds, which include physiological levels, are added to the growth media. These studies investigate the effects of 17-ß-estradiol on C. albicans and also look at estrogenic compounds that are found commonly in oral contraceptives and hormone replacement therapy. Growth conditions that demonstrate a significant effect on C. albicans compared to untreated controls are analyzed using microarrays to assess changes in gene expression that accompany the cell biological effects. These data provide a comprehensive evaluation of the phenotypic effects of estrogen exposure on cultured C. albicans cells and associate them with the corresponding changes in gene expression to provide a more integrated view of the cellular mechanisms that respond to estrogen exposure.
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cdr1::hisG/
cdr1::hisG;
cdr2::hisG/
cdr2::hisG-URA3-hisG) (41) was a generous gift from Dominique Sanglard (Institute of Microbiology, University Hospital Lausanne). Other C. albicans strains were clinical isolates collected in a previous study from women who were either symptomatic or asymptomatic for VVC (10). Strains in this collection are given a GC designation that is followed by a number that corresponds to the patient number in the study by Cheng et al. (10). Limited clinical history information to accompany each strain can be found in that reference. GC strains were evaluated for their ability to form germ tubes in phenol red-free RPMI 1640 medium (RPMI-free; Invitrogen catalog number 11835). Phenol red-free medium was used in all experiments described in the article, since lipophilic impurities in standard phenol red preparations have estrogenic properties (4). A single colony from a YPD agar plate of each strain was inoculated into 15 ml of synthetic complete medium (SC) (24) and grown for 16 h at 37°C with 200 rpm shaking. Strain SC5314 was included as a control. Cells were pelleted and washed three times in Dulbecco's phosphate-buffered saline without Ca2+ or Mg2+ (DPBS; Cambrex catalog number 17-513Q) and counted using a hemacytometer. Cells were inoculated at a density of 5 x 106 cells ml1 into 15 ml RPMI-free that had been prewarmed at 37°C for 30 min. Cultures were grown for 1 h at 37°C and 200-rpm shaking and cells were then fixed in 1% (vol/vol) glutaraldehyde.
Strains were evaluated for their ability to form germ tubes relative to strain SC5314. This qualitative microscopic evaluation categorized strains as strong germ tube formers that appeared similar to SC5314, intermediate germ tube formers where germination occurred but with obviously lower frequency than for SC5314, and weak germ tube formers where the presence of germ tubes was nearly absent under the growth conditions tested. Evaluations were repeated twice to ensure reproducibility of results. From these observations, two strains were designated as strong germ tube formers, 14 as intermediate, and eight as weak. In subsequent experiments, strain SC5314 represented the strong group, strain GC15 represented the intermediate group, and strain GC29 represented the weak group.
Estrogenic compounds.
17-
-Estradiol, 17-ß-estradiol, estriol, and ethynyl estradiol were purchased from Steraloids (Newport, RI). Estrogen stock solutions were dissolved in absolute ethanol and stored at 4°C. Stock solutions were made monthly. 17-ß-Estradiol was selected because it is the most biologically common estrogen, 17-
-estradiol as a chemically similar control compound that lacks estrogenic activity, estriol as an estrogen that rises during pregnancy, and ethynyl estradiol because of its common use in oral contraceptives.
Evaluation of germ tube formation. All glassware for these experiments was acid washed, rinsed thoroughly in MilliQ water, and autoclaved prior to use. A single colony of each C. albicans strain (SC5314, GC15, and GC29) was taken from a YPD agar plate and inoculated into 30 ml of SC medium. This culture was grown for 16 h at 37°C with 200-rpm shaking. Cells were collected and washed three times in DPBS and inoculated at a density of 5 x 106 cells ml1 into the appropriate growth medium (RPMI-free or SC) that had been prewarmed for 30 min at 37°C and supplemented with estrogen. Estrogenic compounds were added to culture media at a 1:1,000 dilution to achieve final concentrations of 105, 107, and 1010 M; an equivalent volume of absolute ethanol was added to the control (no estrogen) culture. Cultures were grown at 37°C and 200 rpm shaking.
At 85 and 300 min, C. albicans cells were removed from the culture, fixed with 1% (vol/vol) glutaraldehyde, and stored at 4°C. Percent germ tube formation was evaluated microscopically by evaluation of 100 cells per culture; three or more replicates were completed for each culture condition. Cells with germ tubes of the same or greater length as those of the mother yeast were considered positive and others were considered negative. Data were expressed as percent positive cells for each culture with three or more replicates of the experiment for each strain-estrogen combination. To assess differences in germ tube formation among the treatment groups, the mean of the observations was calculated and an analysis of variance was conducted using the MIXED procedure in SAS (SAS Institute). Germ tube length was evaluated microscopically using a micrometer. Fifty cells were measured for each culture; three replicates were completed for each culture condition. Mean germ tube length was calculated for each culture condition and analyzed with the MIXED procedure in SAS.
Evaluation of culture biomass. Cultures were inoculated as described above and grown for 120 and 480 min at 37°C and 200 rpm shaking. Filter membranes (0.2 µm pore size; Fisher) were baked at 80°C for 2 h and immediately weighed on an analytical balance. At the specified time interval, cells from 20 ml of culture volume were collected by filtration on the weighed membranes. Membranes were dried by baking overnight at 80°C and immediately reweighed. Biomass was calculated as the difference between the filter weights. The mean biomass of four replicates was used in calculating the differences between the various treatment groups by using a mixed-model analysis.
Microarray analysis. Preparation of starter and experimental cultures of C. albicans strains followed the method described above. To evaluate the effect of 17-ß-estradiol on C. albicans gene expression, cultures of strain SC5314 were grown for either 10 or 85 min in either SC or RPMI-free with an estrogen concentration of either 105 or 1010 M. Control flasks contained an equivalent volume of absolute ethanol. Cells were collected by filtration, and filters were flash-frozen in a dry ice/ethanol bath and stored at 80°C until RNA was extracted. RNA extraction used a hot phenol method (11). Construction of the PCR product-based microarray and methods for target labeling and data analysis were described previously (52).
Microarray hybridizations were carried out using a standard reference design with a dye swap for each comparison. The "control" cells served as the "reference" for the appropriate comparisons with either SC- or RPMI-free-grown cells. Two biological replicates were completed. Microarray fluorescence data were inspected for normalization using MA plots. Data were normalized with a log2 transformation. Specific estrogen treatments were compared using the MIXED procedure in SAS. The estimate value for each gene is a means separation between the control and estrogen-treated groups. The estimate value and significance for each gene in a comparison were calculated using the least squares estimation using the LSMEANS option in SAS. Fold change was calculated as twice the estimate value.
The PCR product microarray was based on the assembly 6 annotation of the C. albicans sequencing project. orf6 identities were matched to their closest orf19 counterparts using the conversion tool at http://candida.bri.nrc.ca/candida/. orf19 identities were verified at http://agabian.ucsf.edu/canoDB/. When discrepancies occurred, orf19 names were assigned based on a BLAST search at http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/. Gene names and descriptions were based on descriptions from the Agabian lab (http://agabian.ucsf.edu/canoDB/) and CGD (http://www.candidagenome.org/) websites.
Real-time RT-PCR analysis. Differential gene expression results from microarray analysis were validated using real-time reverse transcription (RT)-PCR. Specific methods for this analysis were described previously (52). Primers for real-time RT-PCR analysis were designed using PrimerExpress (Applied Biosystems). Each primer had a Tm of between 59°C and 60°C and an amplicon size of between 50 and 100 bp. Primer sequences are shown in Table 1. Primer specificity was verified with a dissociation profile of each amplicon. A standard curve for each primer set was derived using 1:10, 1:25, 1:50, 1:100, 1:250, and 1:500 dilutions of the cDNA. The slopes of the standard curves were within 10% of 100% efficiency. CT values were determined using the Autoanalyze feature of the ABI PRISM 7000 sequence detection system software.
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TABLE 1. Real-time RT-PCR primers used in this studya
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CT method (34), where 
CT = (CT,Estrogen CT,TEF1) (CT,Control CT,TEF1). The change (n-fold) in the target gene, normalized to TEF1, was calculated for each sample by using the equation 2
CT. Independent replicate RNA preparations were tested for each target gene. Each RNA sample was reverse transcribed twice. Triplicate real-time PCRs were run on each of the four cDNA preparations. The mean of the CT values for the triplicate reactions was calculated and used to derive a 2
CT value. The mean and standard error of the four 2
CT values are reported. |
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Figure 1 shows the morphology of strains SC5314 and GC15 following culture in RPMI-free; similar images are shown in Fig. 2 for cells grown in SC. Growth in RPMI-free resulted in germ tube formation for strains SC5314 and GC15; cells of strain GC29 (not shown) remained as yeast forms even after several hours of incubation. In SC, strains SC5314 and GC15 formed pseudohyphae (Fig. 2), while GC29 grew as yeast forms (not shown). As incubation progressed in SC, the elongated pseudohyphae gave rise to yeast forms (Fig. 2). This pattern of growth did not lend itself well to counting or measuring the length of elongated forms, so these efforts were pursued only with RPMI-free.
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FIG. 1. Light micrographs of C. albicans cells from strains SC5314 or GC15 grown in RPMI-free for the indicated times in the presence of 105 M 17-ß-estradiol or an equivalent volume of absolute ethanol (control).
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FIG. 2. Light micrographs of C. albicans cells from strains SC5314 or GC15 grown in SC for the indicated times in the presence of 105 M 17-ß-estradiol or an equivalent volume of absolute ethanol (control).
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-estradiol to the culture medium at the highest concentration (105 M) did not increase germ tube formation of any strain, suggesting that the observed effects for 17-ß-estradiol are specific for that compound (Fig. 3a). The addition of estriol at 105 M did not affect germ tube formation (Fig. 3a), however, addition of ethynyl estradiol at 105 M increased germ tube formation for strain GC15 (P = 0.03), but not for SC5314 (P = 1.0; Fig. 3a).
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FIG. 3. (a) Histogram summarizing germ tube formation data at 85 min for experiments using different C. albicans strains and various concentrations of estrogenic compounds. Strain GC29 was tested in all growth conditions and gave values of <0.5%. (b) Histogram summarizing germ tube length data at 300 min for strains SC5314 and GC15. Strain GC29 was not tested.
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Effect of estrogen exposure on culture biomass. The effect of 17-ß-estradiol on culture biomass was examined because of a previous report that suggested an increase in culture biomass in the presence of estrogenic compounds (22). In our studies, strains SC5314, GC15, and GC29 were grown in either RPMI-free or SC. The biomass of filtered, dried cells was measured at two different time points (see Materials and Methods). For cells grown in RPMI-free, the first measurement was taken at 2 h, when nearly all the germ tubes were longer than the mother yeast cell, and the second was taken at 8 h. For SC cultures, biomass measurements were taken at 2 h and 8 h, which corresponded to early and mid-logarithmic growth, respectively. The addition of 17-ß-estradiol did not significantly change biomass compared to the control (estrogen-negative) cultures in either growth medium (Fig. 4).
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FIG. 4. Histogram showing biomass data for analysis of C. albicans strains SC5314, GC15, and GC29 at 2 h and 8 h in RPMI-free and SC. All experiments compared different concentrations of 17-ß-estradiol to a negative control sample.
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TABLE 2. Summary of microarray comparisons to evaluate effects of estrogen exposure on C. albicans gene expression
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2.0-fold change in gene expression on the microarray also showed the same direction of expression change (up- or down-regulation, for example) and a similar relative magnitude of change in the real-time analysis. This comparison provided our biological cutoff of 2.0-fold change for the microarray data. All genes listed in data tables have a statistical significance cutoff at P
0.05. Table 3 lists genes that were differentially expressed in more than one experimental condition, while Table A1 in the supplemental material lists genes that were differentially expressed in only one experimental condition. Real-time RT-PCR data are included in Table A2 in the supplemental material. |
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TABLE 3. List of genes differentially expressed in more than one experimental conditiona
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The second set of microarray experiments focused on an 85-min time point to detect gene expression changes that occurred later in germ tube formation. Physiological and supraphysiological concentrations of 17-ß-estradiol were used with strain SC5314 in RPMI-free (experiment II, comparisons E and F) (Table 2). Up-regulation of CDR1 was observed in the supraphysiological estrogen condition (E) (Table 3).
The focus of the subsequent microarray experiments was strain GC15 and supraphysiological concentrations of ethynyl estradiol (experiments III and IV, comparisons G and H) (Table 2) because these growth conditions produced increased germ tube formation and length (Fig. 3). Similar to previous microarray experiments, the 10-min and 85-min time points were studied; CDR1 was up-regulated at both time points (Table 3). A greater number of differentially expressed genes were detected at the 10-min time point than later in germ tube growth. In contrast to previous microarray comparisons, more differentially expressed genes were observed in this experiment and many of these were down-regulated in the estrogen-treated culture (Table 3).
The up-regulation of CDR1 at supraphysiological estrogen concentrations was consistent across the various microarray analyses that were conducted (Table 3). One possible interpretation of the microarray data is that exposure to estrogen increases expression of CDR1, leading to production of Cdr1p, which pumps estrogen out of the C. albicans cell and minimizes its effect on expression of other genes. CDR1 shares 84% sequence identity with CDR2, which also encodes a drug efflux pump (41). On the microarray used in this analysis, cDNA derived from CDR1 or CDR2 transcripts could hybridize with the PCR product-derived array probe.
In order to determine whether the apparent increase in CDR1 expression was due to a single gene or both genes, real-time RT-PCR primers that distinguish between the two genes were designed (Table 1). Real-time RT-PCR analysis showed that expression of both CDR1 and CDR2 increased in C. albicans cells exposed to estrogen (see Table A2 in the supplemental material). In order to remove the effect of these drug efflux pumps from our analysis, the experiments were conducted with strain DSY654, in which both genes were deleted (41).
Prior to microarray analysis, strain DSY654 was grown in RPMI-free to determine the effect of 17-ß-estradiol addition on germ tube formation after 85 min of exposure (Fig. 5). Strain SC5314 was included in the analysis as a control. The addition of 17-ß-estradiol to SC5314 cells showed increased germ tube formation at the highest estrogen concentration, with the effect diminishing as the estrogen concentration decreased. These results were similar to those obtained in previous experiments (Fig. 3). In contrast to the case with SC5314, the addition of 17-ß-estradiol to strain DSY654 decreased germ tube formation significantly (P = 0.03) (Fig. 5).
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FIG. 5. Histogram summarizing germ tube formation data at 85 min for strains SC5314 and DSY654 treated with 17-ß-estradiol.
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Microarray analysis of strain DSY654 also showed up-regulation of TAC1, which encodes a transcriptional regulator of CDR1 and CDR2 (13). RTA3, which is regulated by TAC1, was also up-regulated in DSY654 (13, 16) (see Table A1 in the supplemental material). IFU5, which is also regulated by TAC1, was up-regulated in DSY654, but just missed the 2.0-fold biological cutoff for inclusion in Table A1 in the supplemental material. Several hypothetical proteins, for which no function has been deduced, were also up-regulated in strain DSY654 following exposure to 17-ß-estradiol (Table 3) (see Table A1 in the supplemental material).
Real-time RT-PCR analysis of EBP1 expression. Initial searches for a C. albicans estrogen-binding protein led to biochemical purification of the protein encoded by the gene EBP1 (estrogen binding protein 1) (38, 43). Completion of the C. albicans genome sequence and subsequent annotation suggest that there are as many as seven genes that are related in sequence to EBP1, with OYE21 sharing the most sequence identity (86.7%) (12, 27). Real-time RT-PCR primers were designed based on sequence differences between EBP1 and OYE21 to detect expression of EBP1. Real-time RT-PCR analysis was conducted on some of the RNA samples that were used for the microarray analysis to determine if EBP1 was differentially expressed under any of these growth conditions. Results from analysis of EBP1 expression are included in Table A2 in the supplemental material. Under the conditions tested, EBP1 was not differentially expressed in response to estrogen exposure. Therefore, if C. albicans uses Ebp1p in its response to estrogen exposure, it does so without an increase in transcription of the EBP1 gene.
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Both GC15 and GC29 are recent vaginal isolates from women with clinical signs of VVC. The effect of 17-ß-estradiol was so marked at the 105 M concentration that germ tube length was visibly longer for strains SC5314 and GC15 compared to the untreated control cells (Fig. 3b). The addition of ethynyl estradiol to GC15 cells also resulted in increased germ tube formation and length. The results of our studies compare favorably with those of Kinsman et al. (30), who showed that the addition of 107 M 17-ß-estradiol to C. albicans during incubation in 10% serum resulted in increased germ tube formation and length. The results from this group were dose dependent in the range of 106 to 108 M 17-ß-estradiol. The disparity between 17-ß-estradiol concentration and measured effects for our study and that of Kinsman et al. (30) might be due to the presence of estrogen in their serum preparation. White and Larsen (49) also noted changes in germ tube formation when 17-ß-estradiol was added to C. albicans cells in serum, however, in their study, germ tube formation decreased as 17-ß-estradiol concentration increased between 108 and 106 M. It is possible that strain effects play a role in generating different results since the strain effects we noted within our collection of clinical vaginal isolates were large (see Materials and Methods).
The data presented here suggest that addition of 17-ß-estradiol to C. albicans cells increases germ tube formation and length, although at physiological concentrations of estrogen, these effects are likely to be slight. However, even slight increases in the formation and length of C. albicans germ tubes may help the organism withstand sloughing of the vaginal epithelium and maintain colonization of the host.
Biomass analysis of the effect of 17-ß-estradiol addition to cultured C. albicans cells showed no statistical difference between estrogen-treated and control cultures for any of the C. albicans strains. In a previous study, Gujjar et al. (22) observed a significant increase in culture biomass when 106 M 17-ß-estradiol was added to C. albicans cells cultured for 7 days in a chemically defined medium. The increased germ tube length that we noted in the experiments described above suggest that a concomitant increase in biomass should also occur. It is likely that the method used to measure differences in biomass (weighing of dried, filtered cells) was not sensitive enough to detect this change. The effect of slight increases in biomass of C. albicans cells in the host are not known, but intuitively, increased biomass would likely promote colonization of the vaginal epithelium.
Knowledge of the gene expression changes that occur in C. albicans cells following exposure to estrogenic compounds are mainly from studies of the effects of antifungal compounds on C. albicans (16, 28, 31, 50). Our analysis used microarray technology to gain a larger picture of the effects of estrogen exposure on C. albicans cells. Cell biology experiments were followed by microarray analysis that emphasized understanding the gene expression changes observed under growth conditions that showed increased germ tube formation and length. One general conclusion from the entirety of our microarray work is that exposure of cultured C. albicans cells to exogenous estrogen affects the expression of a relatively small number of genes. The lists of differentially expressed genes mainly differed depending on the combination of strain/estrogen/incubation time analyzed. A limited number of genes were differentially expressed in more than one growth condition (Table 3), with most genes entered on this list because of their differential expression in strain GC15 treated with ethynyl estradiol for 10 min and in strain DSY654 treated with 17-ß-estradiol for 85 min.
One gene that was differentially expressed under many growth conditions, and often with the highest magnitude of change, was CDR1. This result matches previous publications that showed increased expression of CDR1 in the presence of estrogenic compounds (16, 28, 31, 50). On our PCR product-based microarray, the CDR1 probe also hybridizes to cDNA derived from CDR2 because of the large degree of sequence identity between the genes (41). To distinguish between transcript derived from CDR1 and those from CDR2, real-time RT-PCR primers were designed to specifically recognize each gene (Table 1). The results of real-time RT-PCR analysis showed that the signal observed on the microarray was a combination of increased transcription from both CDR1 and CDR2 (see Table A2 in the supplemental material). These results suggest that, in the presence of exogenous estrogen, cultured C. albicans cells respond as they would in the presence of antifungal drugs and up-regulate production of efflux pumps to eliminate the estrogen from the cell. This logic is consistent with the work of de Micheli et al. (16) who showed the presence of drug responsive element sequences in the promoter of CDR1 and CDR2.
The extensive microarray analysis performed in the context of our studies led to a model to explain the molecular basis for increased germ tube formation and length that occurs for estrogen-exposed C. albicans cells (Fig. 6). The method of entry of 17-ß-estradiol into the C. albicans cell is not known, but it is assumed to occur by diffusion (32). Once inside the cell, 17-ß-estradiol increases transcription of TAC1, which then increases transcription of CDR1, CDR2, IFU5, and RTA3 (13). Increased transcription of CDR1 and CDR2 likely increases the production of efflux pumps, which remove 17-ß-estradiol from the C. albicans cell (32). These interactions are supported by data published previously by other groups and also by our microarray data. Since Cdr1p and Cdr2p pump 17-ß-estradiol out of the C. albicans cell, the intracellular levels of 17-ß-estradiol should be relatively low.
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FIG. 6. Model to reconcile cell biology effects of estrogen exposure on cultured C. albicans cells with microarray observations of gene expression patterns.
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In S. cerevisiae, PDR16 (SFH3) demonstrates an effect on sterols and phospholipids (48). Strains lacking PDR16 show a decreased percentage of ergosterol and an increased percentage of episterol and fecosterol, suggesting an effect of PDR16 on the intermediate steps between episterol and ergosterol. van den Hazel et al. (48) hypothesized that PDR16 is involved in the regulation of sterol concentrations by either affecting sterol enzymes or altering the sterol availability. Pdr16p localizes to microsomes and the plasma membrane (42). Upon the deletion of PDR16, the phospholipid composition changed and was further reduced when the gene was deleted in combination with PDR17 (48). In pdr16 pdr17 deletion mutants, membrane-bound lipid transfer was affected (48). Furthermore, in strains lacking SFHs, the products of phospholipid D (PLD), choline and phosphatidic acid, are reduced, indicating that SFH proteins act on PLD activity. Routt and Bankaitis (40) hypothesized that SFH proteins are involved in the activation of PLD, by acting on phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate (PIP2) synthesis.
In C. albicans, PLD activity is increased during the yeast-to- hypha transition (36). Phosphatidic acid, a product of PLD activity, stimulates phosphatidylinositiol-4-phosphate 5-kinase (PI4P5K) (23). PI4P5K activity is increased during temperature-induced hypha formation (23). Phosphatidic acid is suggested as an effector molecule involved in the yeast to hypha transition (2), by acting as a positive feedback regulator of PI4P5K (23). Additionally, PLD mutants show reduced invasion on solid medium and reduced virulence in a mouse model (17, 26). PLD is suggested to be involved in a hypha signaling pathway linked with tissue invasion. As suggested in S. cerevisiae (33, 40), PDR16 in C. albicans could be acting on PI4P5K to synthesize more PIP2. PIP2 then stimulates PLD, which is involved in the yeast-to-hypha transition. The potential interrelationships between 17-ß-estradiol, transcription of PDR16 and PLD1, and the link between Pld1p activity and hypha formation suggest a model by which increased hypha formation is promoted in C. albicans in the presence of estrogen.
Another intriguing component to this model is the fact that 17-ß-estradiol could be modified in C. albicans to form other compounds that contribute to the altered ability of the cell to form germ tubes. In S. cerevisiae, steroids such as estradiol are esterified by an alcohol acetyltransferase (ATF2) (9). The preferred substrate for Aft2p is pregnenalone. In a mutant deficient for Atf2p activity, pregnenalone slows the growth rate, indicating a toxic effect. Cauet et al. (9) hypothesized that the cellular target of pregnenalone is ERG2 and efflux pumps are responding to a potential growth inhibition of ergosterol biosynthesis. They suggest that pregnenolone's toxicity is tempered by esterification with Atf2p and by efflux from the cell through Snq2p and Pdr5p. This example demonstrates how steroid molecules might interfere with growth rate of a fungal cell. Alterations in growth rate would affect germ tube formation.
Despite the fact that many pieces of key evidence still need to be deduced to support it, the model proposed in Fig. 6 reconciles our cell biological and microarray data and provides a starting point for explaining how exposure to exogenous estrogens increases germ tube formation and length. In the presence of supraphysiological levels of 17-ß-estradiol, C. albicans up-regulates CDR1 and CDR2 to pump the estrogen from the cell producing relatively low intracellular levels of 17-ß-estradiol, despite the supraphysiological levels of estrogen in the growth medium. The addition of 17-ß-estradiol to C. albicans cells also up-regulates expression of PDR16. The potential mechanism for how increased PDR16 expression might result in increased germ tube formation was provided above and involves the action of Pld1p.
The potential for 17-ß-estradiol to be converted to another biologically active compound was also discussed above. We propose that this conversion step is far less favored than the steps already described and that it occurs only in the presence of relatively high intracellular estrogen concentrations, such as those that are likely to occur in the absence of efflux pump activity in strain DSY654. At high intracellular levels of 17-ß-estradiol, the less-efficient conversion of 17-ß-estradiol could occur. We propose that the end product of this reaction might be ethynyl estradiol in order to explain the unexpectedly similar gene expression results observed for strain GC15 in the presence of ethynyl estradiol (10 min; efflux pumps functional) and strain DSY654 in the presence of 17-ß-estradiol (85 min; no efflux pump activity). Gene expression patterns at the early time point for the GC15/ethynyl estradiol experiment could resemble those for the DSY654 analysis if the efflux pumps were slower to remove intracellular ethynyl estradiol and higher intracellular concentrations were achieved, causing the cell to favor the pathway where decreased germ tube formation occurs. By the 85-min time point, the efflux pumps may have reduced the intracellular estrogen levels to the point where the system functions much as it does in the presence of 17-ß-estradiol, perhaps through up-regulation of the CDR1 and CDR2 genes. In the mutant strain DSY654, the effect on gene expression patterns may be slowed by the need to convert 17-ß-estradiol to ethynyl estradiol and produce the concomitant effects. Our gene expression data suggest that sufficient conversion had occurred by 85 min.
The model in Fig. 6 describes the effect of estrogen on germ tube formation and length as a balance between competing reactions and interactions. Our data also imply the presence of a strain-specific effect that alters the balance between the competing reactions. However, the model explains the concentration dependent-effects on cellular morphology that we observed and suggests that a concentration of 17-ß-estradiol of <105 M and >107 M will result in increased germ tube formation that can be measured using the experimental methods presented here. More precise measurements would be required to determine if these effects occur at physiological estrogen concentrations and contribute to the physiological balance between C. albicans and its host.
This work was supported by a Minority Predoctoral Fellowship (F31 AI54328) from the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases and by Public Health Service grant DE14158 from the National Institute of Dental and Craniofacial Research of the National Institutes of Health. This investigation was conducted in a facility constructed with support from Research Facilities Improvement Program Grant Number C06 RR16515-01 from the National Center for Research Resources, National Institutes of Health.
Supplemental material for this article may be found at http://ec.asm.org/. ![]()
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CT method. Methods 25:402-408.[CrossRef][Medline]
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