Transcription Profiling of<i>Candida albicans</i>Cells Undergoing the Yeast-to-Hyphal Transition

André Nantel(Biotechnology Research Institute), Daniel Dignard(Biotechnology Research Institute), Catherine Bachewich(Biotechnology Research Institute), Doreen Harcus(Biotechnology Research Institute), Anne Marcil(Biotechnology Research Institute), Anne‐Pascale Bouin(Biotechnology Research Institute), Christoph W. Sensen(Institute for Marine Biosciences), Hervé Hogues(Biotechnology Research Institute), Marco van het Hoog(Biotechnology Research Institute), Paul M. K. Gordon(Institute for Marine Biosciences), Tracey Rigby(Biotechnology Research Institute), François Benoit(Biotechnology Research Institute), Daniel C. Tessier(Biotechnology Research Institute), David Y. Thomas(Biotechnology Research Institute), Malcolm Whiteway(Biotechnology Research Institute)
Molecular Biology of the Cell
October 1, 2002
Cited by 374Open Access
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Abstract

The ability of the pathogenic fungus Candida albicans to switch from a yeast to a hyphal morphology in response to external signals is implicated in its pathogenicity. We used glass DNA microarrays to investigate the transcription profiles of 6333 predicted ORFs in cells undergoing this transition and their responses to changes in temperature and culture medium. We have identified several genes whose transcriptional profiles are similar to those of known virulence factors that are modulated by the switch to hyphal growth caused by addition of serum and a 37 degrees C growth temperature. Time course analysis of this transition identified transcripts that are induced before germ tube initiation and shut off later in the developmental process. A strain deleted for the Efg1p and Cph1p transcription factors is defective in hyphae formation, and its response to serum and increased temperature is almost identical to the response of a wild-type strain grown at 37 degrees C in the absence of serum. Thus Efg1p and Cph1p are needed for the activation of the transcriptional program that is induced by the presence of serum.


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