Litcius/Paper detail

A Novel Resistance Pathway for Calcineurin Inhibitors in the Human-Pathogenic Mucorales Mucor circinelloides

Sandeep Vellanki, R. Blake Billmyre, Alejandra Lorenzen, Micaela Campbell, Broderick Turner, Eun Young Huh, Joseph Heitman, Soo Chan Lee

2020mBio46 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Mucor is intrinsically resistant to most known antifungals, which makes mucormycosis treatment challenging. Calcineurin is a serine/threonine phosphatase that is widely conserved across eukaryotes. When calcineurin function is inhibited in Mucor , growth shifts to a less virulent yeast growth form, which makes calcineurin an attractive target for development of new antifungal drugs. Previously, we identified two distinct mechanisms through which Mucor can become resistant to calcineurin inhibitors involving Mendelian mutations in the gene for FKBP12, including mechanisms corresponding to calcineurin A or B subunits and epimutations silencing the FKBP12 gene. Here, we identified a third novel mechanism where loss-of-function mutations in the amino acid permease corresponding to the bycA gene contribute to resistance against calcineurin inhibitors. When calcineurin activity is absent, BycA can activate protein kinase A (PKA) to promote yeast growth via a cAMP-independent pathway. Our data also show that calcineurin activity contributes to host-pathogen interactions primarily in the pathogenesis of Mucor.

Topics & Concepts

CalcineurinMucor circinelloidesBiologyMucorVirulenceMicrobiologyPhosphataseGeneBiochemistryEnzymeTransplantationMedicineAspergillusSurgeryAntifungal resistance and susceptibilitySignaling Pathways in DiseasePeptidase Inhibition and Analysis