Litcius/Paper detail

A Myosin Light Chain Is Critical for Fungal Growth Robustness in Candida albicans

Charles Puerner, Antonio Serrano, Rohan S. Wakade, Martine Bassilana, Robert A. Arkowitz

2021mBio12 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Hyphal tip growth is critical in a range of fungal pathogens, in particular for invasion into animal and plant tissues. In Candida albicans, as in many filamentous fungi, a cluster of vesicles, called a Spitzenkörper, is observed at the tip of growing hyphae that is thought to function as a vesicle supply center. A central prediction of the vesicle supply center model is that the filament diameter is proportional to the extension rate. Here, we show that mutants lacking the Spitzenkörper component myosin light chain 1 (Mlc1) or having synthetic physical interactions between Mlc1 and either another Spitzenkörper component or prenylated GFP, are defective in filamentous growth regulation, exhibiting a range of growth rates and sizes, with a strong correlation between diameter and extension rate. These results suggest that the Spitzenkörper is important for growth robustness and reveal a critical link between filament morphology and extension rate.

Topics & Concepts

Candida albicansExocystMyosinRabBiologyVesicleCell biologyHyphaMutantTip growthMyosin light-chain kinaseProtein filamentBiophysicsMicrobiologyGTPaseBiochemistryBotanyMembraneGenePollenPollen tubePollinationFungal and yeast genetics researchAntifungal resistance and susceptibilityMicrotubule and mitosis dynamics