Microbial Pathogenicity

Two C4-sterol methyl oxidases (Erg25) catalyse ergosterol intermediate demethylation and impact environmental stress adaptation in Aspergillus fumigatus

  • Department of Immunology and Infectious Diseases, Montana State University, Bozeman, Montana, USA
  • Correspondence
    Robert A. Cramer Robert.a.cramer.jr{at}dartmouth.edu
  • Microbiology 2014; 160(Pt 11):2492–2506 · https://doi.org/10.1099/mic.0.080440-0

    View at publisher PubMed

    Abstract

    The human pathogen Aspergillus fumigatus adapts to stress encountered in the mammalian host as part of its ability to cause disease. The transcription factor SrbA plays a significant role in this process by regulating genes involved in hypoxia and low-iron adaptation, antifungal drug responses and virulence. SrbA is a direct transcriptional regulator of genes encoding key enzymes in the ergosterol biosynthesis pathway, including erg25A and erg25B, and ΔsrbA accumulates C4-methyl sterols, suggesting a loss of Erg25 activity [C4-sterol methyl oxidase (SMO)]. Characterization of the two genes encoding SMOs in Aspergillus fumigatus revealed that both serve as functional C4-demethylases, with Erg25A serving in a primary role, as Δerg25A accumulates more C4-methyl sterol intermediates than Δerg25B. Single deletion of these SMOs revealed alterations in canonical ergosterol biosynthesis, indicating that ergosterol may be produced in an alternative fashion in the absence of SMO activity. A Δerg25A strain displayed moderate susceptibility to hypoxia and the endoplasmic reticulum stress-inducing agent DTT, but was not required for virulence in murine or insect models of invasive aspergillosis. Inducing expression of erg25A partially restored the hypoxia growth defect of ΔsrbA. These findings implicated Aspergillus fumigatus SMOs in the maintenance of canonical ergosterol biosynthesis and indicated an overall involvement in the fungal stress response.

    • One supplementary table and three supplementary figures are available with the online Supplementary Material.

    • Edited by: J. Morschhäuser

    Abbreviations:
    ER
    endoplasmic reticulum
    q
    quantitative
    RT
    real-time
    SMO
    C4-sterol methyl oxidase
    SREBP
    sterol regulatory element binding protein