PLoS Biology (Mar 2021)

An evolutionarily diverged mitochondrial protein controls biofilm growth and virulence in Candida albicans.

  • Zeinab Mamouei,
  • Shakti Singh,
  • Bernard Lemire,
  • Yiyou Gu,
  • Abdullah Alqarihi,
  • Sunna Nabeela,
  • Dongmei Li,
  • Ashraf Ibrahim,
  • Priya Uppuluri

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pbio.3000957
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 19, no. 3
p. e3000957

Abstract

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A forward genetic screening approach identified orf19.2500 as a gene controlling Candida albicans biofilm dispersal and biofilm detachment. Three-dimensional (3D) protein modeling and bioinformatics revealed that orf19.2500 is a conserved mitochondrial protein, structurally similar to, but functionally diverged from, the squalene/phytoene synthases family. The C. albicans orf19.2500 is distinguished by 3 evolutionarily acquired stretches of amino acid inserts, absent from all other eukaryotes except a small number of ascomycete fungi. Biochemical assays showed that orf19.2500 is required for the assembly and activity of the NADH ubiquinone oxidoreductase Complex I (CI) of the respiratory electron transport chain (ETC) and was thereby named NDU1. NDU1 is essential for respiration and growth on alternative carbon sources, important for immune evasion, required for virulence in a mouse model of hematogenously disseminated candidiasis, and for potentiating resistance to antifungal drugs. Our study is the first report on a protein that sets the Candida-like fungi phylogenetically apart from all other eukaryotes, based solely on evolutionary "gain" of new amino acid inserts that are also the functional hub of the protein.