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1

Campbell, C. L., i P. E. Thorsness. "Escape of mitochondrial DNA to the nucleus in yme1 yeast is mediated by vacuolar-dependent turnover of abnormal mitochondrial compartments". Journal of Cell Science 111, nr 16 (15.08.1998): 2455–64. http://dx.doi.org/10.1242/jcs.111.16.2455.

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Inactivation of Yme1p, a mitochondrially-localized ATP-dependent metallo-protease in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae, causes a high rate of DNA escape from mitochondria to the nucleus as well as pleiotropic functional and morphological mitochondrial defects. The evidence presented here suggests that the abnormal mitochondria of a yme1 strain are degraded by the vacuole. First, electron microscopy of Yme1p-deficient strains revealed mitochondria physically associated with the vacuole via electron dense structures. Second, disruption of vacuolar function affected the frequency of mitochondrial DNA escape from yme1 and wild-type strains. Both PEP4 or PRC1 gene disruptions resulted in a lower frequency of mitochondrial DNA escape. Third, an in vivo assay that monitors vacuole-dependent turnover of the mitochondrial compartment demonstrated an increased rate of mitochondrial turnover in yme1 yeast when compared to the rate found in wild-type yeast. In this assay, vacuolar alkaline phosphatase, encoded by PHO8, was targeted to mitochondria in a strain bearing disruption to the genomic PHO8 locus. Maturation of the mitochondrially localized alkaline phosphatase pro-enzyme requires proteinase A, which is localized in the vacuole. Therefore, alkaline phosphatase activity reflects vacuole-dependent turnover of mitochondria. This assay reveals that mitochondria of a yme1 strain are taken up by the vacuole more frequently than mitochondria of an isogenic wild-type strain when these yeast are cultured in medium necessitating respiratory growth. Degradation of abnormal mitochondria is one pathway by which mitochondrial DNA escapes and migrates to the nucleus.
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2

Hanekamp, T., i P. E. Thorsness. "Inactivation of YME2/RNA12, which encodes an integral inner mitochondrial membrane protein, causes increased escape of DNA from mitochondria to the nucleus in Saccharomyces cerevisiae." Molecular and Cellular Biology 16, nr 6 (czerwiec 1996): 2764–71. http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/mcb.16.6.2764.

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Inactivation of the yeast nuclear gene YMe2 causes an increased rate of DNA escape from mitochondria to the nucleus. Mutations in yme2 also show genetic interactions with yme1, a second gene that affects DNA escape from mitochondria to the nucleus. The yme1 cold-sensitive growth phenotype is suppressed by yme2 mutations. In addition, yme1 yme2 double mutants exhibit a synthetic growth defect on ethanol-glycerol medium at 30 degrees C. YME2 was isolated by complementation of the synthetic growth defect of yme1 yme2 strains and was found to be identical with the previously cloned RNA12 gene. The dominant temperature-sensitive mutation RNA12-1 prevents growth of yeast cells at 37 degrees C. YME2 encodes a protein with a predicted molecular weight of 96,681 and is an integral inner mitochondrial membrane protein. The larger carboxyl-terminal domain of the YME2 gene product faces the intermembrane space. Null alleles of yme2 display the same genetic interactions with yme1 and high rate of DNA escape from mitochondria as do the originally isolated yme2 mutant strains. Disruption of yme2 causes a strain-dependent growth defect on nonfermentable carbon sources.
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3

Thorsness, P. E., K. H. White i T. D. Fox. "Inactivation of YME1, a member of the ftsH-SEC18-PAS1-CDC48 family of putative ATPase-encoding genes, causes increased escape of DNA from mitochondria in Saccharomyces cerevisiae". Molecular and Cellular Biology 13, nr 9 (wrzesień 1993): 5418–26. http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/mcb.13.9.5418-5426.1993.

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The yeast nuclear gene YME1 was one of six genes recently identified in a screen for mutations that elevate the rate at which DNA escapes from mitochondria and migrates to the nucleus. yme1 mutations, including a deletion, cause four known recessive phenotypes: an elevation in the rate at which copies of TRP1 and ARS1, integrated into the mitochondrial genome, escape to the nucleus; a heat-sensitive respiratory-growth defect; a cold-sensitive growth defect on rich glucose medium; and synthetic lethality in rho- (cytoplasmic petite) cells. The cloned YME1 gene complements all of these phenotypes. The gene product, Yme1p, is immunologically detectable as an 82-kDa protein present in mitochondria. Yme1p is a member of a family of homologous putative ATPases, including Sec18p, Pas1p, Cdc48p, TBP-1, and the FtsH protein. Yme1p is most similar to the Escherichia coli FtsH protein, an essential protein involved in septum formation during cell division. This observation suggests the hypothesis that Yme1p may play a role in mitochondrial fusion and/or division.
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4

Thorsness, P. E., K. H. White i T. D. Fox. "Inactivation of YME1, a member of the ftsH-SEC18-PAS1-CDC48 family of putative ATPase-encoding genes, causes increased escape of DNA from mitochondria in Saccharomyces cerevisiae." Molecular and Cellular Biology 13, nr 9 (wrzesień 1993): 5418–26. http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/mcb.13.9.5418.

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The yeast nuclear gene YME1 was one of six genes recently identified in a screen for mutations that elevate the rate at which DNA escapes from mitochondria and migrates to the nucleus. yme1 mutations, including a deletion, cause four known recessive phenotypes: an elevation in the rate at which copies of TRP1 and ARS1, integrated into the mitochondrial genome, escape to the nucleus; a heat-sensitive respiratory-growth defect; a cold-sensitive growth defect on rich glucose medium; and synthetic lethality in rho- (cytoplasmic petite) cells. The cloned YME1 gene complements all of these phenotypes. The gene product, Yme1p, is immunologically detectable as an 82-kDa protein present in mitochondria. Yme1p is a member of a family of homologous putative ATPases, including Sec18p, Pas1p, Cdc48p, TBP-1, and the FtsH protein. Yme1p is most similar to the Escherichia coli FtsH protein, an essential protein involved in septum formation during cell division. This observation suggests the hypothesis that Yme1p may play a role in mitochondrial fusion and/or division.
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5

Weber, E. R., T. Hanekamp i P. E. Thorsness. "Biochemical and functional analysis of the YME1 gene product, an ATP and zinc-dependent mitochondrial protease from S. cerevisiae." Molecular Biology of the Cell 7, nr 2 (luty 1996): 307–17. http://dx.doi.org/10.1091/mbc.7.2.307.

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Inactivation of YME1 in yeast causes several distinct phenotypes: an increased rate of DNA escape from mitochondria, temperature-sensitive growth on nonfermentable carbon sources, extremely slow growth when mitochondrial DNA is completely absent from the cell, and altered morphology of the mitochondrial compartment. The protein encoded by YME1, Yme1p, contains two highly conserved sequence elements, one implicated in the binding and hydrolysis of ATP, and the second characteristic of active site residues found in neutral, zinc-dependent proteases. Both the putative ATPase and zinc-dependent protease elements are necessary for the function of Yme1p as genes having mutations in critical residues of either of these motifs are unable to suppress any of the phenotypes exhibited by yme1 deletion strains. Yme1p co-fractionates with proteins associated with the mitochondrial inner membrane, is tightly associated with this membrane, and is oriented with the bulk of the protein facing the matrix. Unassembled subunit II of cytochrome oxidase is stabilized in yme1 yeast strains. The data support a model in which Yme1p is an ATP and zinc-dependent protease associated with the matrix side of the inner mitochondrial membrane. Subunit II of cytochrome oxidase, when not assembled into a higher order complex, is a likely substrate of Yme1p.
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6

Thorsness, P. E., i T. D. Fox. "Nuclear mutations in Saccharomyces cerevisiae that affect the escape of DNA from mitochondria to the nucleus." Genetics 134, nr 1 (1.05.1993): 21–28. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/genetics/134.1.21.

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Abstract We have inserted a yeast nuclear DNA fragment bearing the TRP1 gene and its associated origin of DNA replication, ARS1, into the functional mitochondrial chromosome of a strain carrying a chromosomal trp1 deletion. TRP1 was not phenotypically expressed within the organelle. However, this Trp- strain readily gave rise to respiratory competent Trp+ clones that contained the TRP1/ARS1 fragment, associated with portions of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA), replicating in their nuclei. Thus the Trp+ clones arose as a result of DNA escaping from mitochondria and migrating to the nucleus. We have isolated 21 nuclear mutants in which the rate of mtDNA escape is increased by screening for increased rates of papillation to Trp+. All 21 mutations were recessive and fell into six complementation groups, termed YME1-YME6. In addition to increasing the rate of mtDNA escape, yme1 mutations also caused a heat-sensitive respiratory deficient phenotype at 37 degrees and a cold-sensitive growth defect on complete glucose medium at 14 degrees. While the other yme mutations had no detectable growth phenotypes, synergistic interactions were observed in two double mutant combinations: a yme1, yme2 double mutant failed to respire at 30 degrees and a yme4, yme6 double mutant failed to respire at all temperatures tested. None of the respiratory defects were caused by loss of functional mtDNA. These findings suggest that yme1, yme2, yme4 and yme6 mutations alter mitochondrial functions and thereby lead to an increased rate of DNA escape from the organelle.
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7

Shafer, Karen S., Theodor Hanekamp, Karen H. White i Peter E. Thorsness. "Mechanisms of mitochondrial DNA escape to the nucleus in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae". Current Genetics 36, nr 4 (13.10.1999): 183–94. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s002940050489.

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8

Fischer, Manuel, Sebastian Horn, Anouar Belkacemi, Kerstin Kojer, Carmelina Petrungaro, Markus Habich, Muna Ali i in. "Protein import and oxidative folding in the mitochondrial intermembrane space of intact mammalian cells". Molecular Biology of the Cell 24, nr 14 (15.07.2013): 2160–70. http://dx.doi.org/10.1091/mbc.e12-12-0862.

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Oxidation of cysteine residues to disulfides drives import of many proteins into the intermembrane space of mitochondria. Recent studies in yeast unraveled the basic principles of mitochondrial protein oxidation, but the kinetics under physiological conditions is unknown. We developed assays to follow protein oxidation in living mammalian cells, which reveal that import and oxidative folding of proteins are kinetically and functionally coupled and depend on the oxidoreductase Mia40, the sulfhydryl oxidase augmenter of liver regeneration (ALR), and the intracellular glutathione pool. Kinetics of substrate oxidation depends on the amount of Mia40 and requires tightly balanced amounts of ALR. Mia40-dependent import of Cox19 in human cells depends on the inner membrane potential. Our observations reveal considerable differences in the velocities of mitochondrial import pathways: whereas preproteins with bipartite targeting sequences are imported within seconds, substrates of Mia40 remain in the cytosol for several minutes and apparently escape premature degradation and oxidation.
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9

Wang, Yawen, Shuai Zhang, Yi Tang i Youxiang Diao. "Screening of Duck Tembusu Virus NS3 Interacting Host Proteins and Identification of Its Specific Interplay Domains". Viruses 11, nr 8 (12.08.2019): 740. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/v11080740.

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NS3 protein is a member of the non-structural protein of duck Tembusu virus (DTMUV), which contains three domains, each of which has serine protease, nucleotide triphosphatase, and RNA helicase activities, respectively. It performs a variety of biological functions that are involved in the regulation of the viral life cycle and host immune response. Based on the yeast two-hybrid system, we successfully transformed pGBKT7-NS3 bait plasmid into Y2H Gold, tested it to prove that it has no self-activation and toxicity, and then hybridized it with the prey yeast strain of the duck embryo fibroblast cDNA library for screening. After high-stringency selection, positive alignment with the National Center for Biotechnology Information database revealed nine potential interactive proteins: MGST1, ERCC4, WIF1, WDR75, ACBD3, PRDX1, RPS7, ND5, and LDHA. The most interesting one (PRDX1) was selected to be verified with full-length NS3 protein and its three domains S7/DEXDc/HELICc using yeast regressive verification and GST Pull-Down assay. It denoted that PRDX1 does indeed interact with HELICc domains of NS3. NS3 is involved in the RNA uncoiling process of viral replication, which may cause mitochondrial overload to create oxidative stress (OS) during DTMUV attack. We deduced that the HELICc domain binding partner PRDX1, which regulates the p38/mitogen-activated protein kinase pathway (p38/MAPK) to avert OS, causing apoptosis, making it possible for viruses to escape host immune responses.
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10

Cui, Yixian, Shanke Zhao, Zhihao Wu, Pinghua Dai i Bing Zhou. "Mitochondrial release of the NADH dehydrogenase Ndi1 induces apoptosis in yeast". Molecular Biology of the Cell 23, nr 22 (15.11.2012): 4373–82. http://dx.doi.org/10.1091/mbc.e12-04-0281.

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Saccharomyces cerevisiae NDI1 codes for the internal mitochondrial ubiquinone oxidoreductase, which transfers electrons from NADH to ubiquinone in the respiratory chain. Previously we found that Ndi1 is a yeast homologue of the protein apoptosis-inducing factor–homologous mitochondrion-associated inducer of death and displays potent proapoptotic activity. Here we show that S. cerevisiae NDI1 is involved in apoptosis induced by various stimuli tested, including H2O2, Mn, and acetate acid, independent of Z-VAD-fmk (a caspase inhibitor) inhibition. Although Ndi1 also participates in respiration, its proapoptotic property is separable from the ubiquinone oxidoreductase activity. During apoptosis, the N-terminal of Ndi1 is cleaved off in the mitochondria, and this activated form then escapes out to execute its apoptotic function. The N-terminal cleavage appears to be essential for the manifestation of the full apoptotic activity, as the uncleaved form of Ndi1 exhibits much less growth-inhibitory activity. Our results thus indicate an important role of Ndi1 in the switch of life and death fates in yeast: during normal growth, Ndi1 assimilates electrons to the electron transport chain and initiates the respiration process to make ATP, whereas under stresses, it cleaves the toxicity-sequestering N-terminal cap, is released from the mitochondria, and becomes a cell killer.
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11

De Luca, Veronica, Manuela Leo, Elisabetta Cretella, Arianna Montanari, Michele Saliola, Gabriele Ciaffi, Andrea Vecchione, Antonella Stoppacciaro i Patrizia Filetici. "Role of yUbp8 in Mitochondria and Hypoxia Entangles the Finding of Human Ortholog Usp22 in the Glioblastoma Pseudo-Palisade Microlayer". Cells 11, nr 10 (19.05.2022): 1682. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cells11101682.

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KAT Gcn5 and DUB Ubp8 are required for respiration and mitochondria functions in budding yeast, and in this study we show that loss of respiratory activity is acquired over time. Interestingly, we show that absence of Ubp8 allows cells to grow in hypoxic conditions with altered mitophagy. Comparatively, the aggressive glioblastoma (GBM) multiforme tumor shows survival mechanisms able to overcome hypoxia in the brain. Starting from yeast and our findings on the role of Ubp8 in hypoxia, we extended our analysis to the human ortholog and signature cancer gene Usp22 in glioblastoma tumor specimens. Here we demonstrate that Usp22 is localized and overexpressed in the pseudo-palisade tissue around the necrotic area of the tumor. In addition, Usp22 colocalizes with the mitophagy marker Parkin, indicating a link with mitochondria function in GBM. Collectively, this evidence suggests that altered expression of Usp22 might provide a way for tumor cells to survive in hypoxic conditions, allowing the escape of cells from the necrotic area toward vascularized tissues. Collectively, our experimental data suggest a model for a possible mechanism of uncontrolled proliferation and invasion in glioblastoma.
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12

Toti, Florence, Bénédicte Hugel, Carole Gidon-Jeangirard, Corinne Kunzelmann, M. Carmen Martínez, Dominique Meyer i Jean-Marie Freyssinet. "Apoptosis in Vascular Disease". Thrombosis and Haemostasis 82, nr 08 (1999): 727–35. http://dx.doi.org/10.1055/s-0037-1615904.

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IntroductionApoptosis, the term introduced 27 years ago to characterize a particular form of cell death distinct from necrosis,1 is now considered a genetically-controlled and energy-dependent process of fundamental significance in the development and maintenance of homeostasis in multicellular organisms.2-4 For instance, in the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans, a model widely used for the study of programmed cell death, 131 of the 1,090 somatic cells generated during hermaphrodite development undergo this form of death.5 Embryologists have suspected cell death of being instrumental in the “sculpture” of parts of the body well before the initial definition of apoptosis. In fact, cell proliferation can no longer be dissociated from apoptosis and it is obvious that variety of disorders involve either an excess of cell death for those referred to as disorders of cell loss, or a defect of apoptosis for those resulting in cell accumulation. Substantial information has been gained from studies of the hierarchical control of lymphocyte survival.6 Apoptosis is accompanied by characteristic changes in cell morphology, among which shrinkage, membrane blebbing, and nucleus condensation are the most frequently evoked (Fig. 1). Budding and disintegration by fragmentation in multiple bodies is the ultimate stage of this death process.7 Alterations are induced by external signals as different as physical (radiation, mechanical stress), chemical (oxidants, xenobiotics) or biological (granzymes, receptor-mediated signals, ceramide), and also by survival factor deprivation. Interestingly, some of these signals can result from subnecrotic damage. In the so-called induction phase, each agent exerts its proapoptotic action through a “private” pathway, leading to the common pathways composed of the effector and degradation phases. The effector phase consists of a mitochondrial checkpoint involving the Bcl-2/Bax anti/proapoptotic balance, immediately after which cytochrome c is released from the injured mitochondrion and binds to adaptor proteins to activate the caspase cascade. The degradation phase is achieved by reactive oxygen species (ROS) generated at the mitochondrial level, cytoplasmic changes (depletion of glutathione and variations of cytosolic calcium), and by caspases.Caspases, also referred to as interleukin-1-converting enzyme (ICE)-like proteases, are a family of cysteine proteinases showing specificity for Asp residue and having various cytoplasmic or nuclear substrates, such as cytoskeletal proteins or proteins involved in DNA repair or control of endonucleases. The latter mechanism explains why DNA ladders, multiples of the 180 bp nucleosomal unit, constitute one of the hallmarks of apoptotic cells.8 Plasma membrane remodeling, resulting in the occurrence of phosphatidylserine (PS) in the exoplasmic leaflet and the shedding of membrane microparticles, are other hallmarks worth considering.9-12 The caspase cascade can, alternatively, be directly activated by granzyme B, which penetrates into the cytoplasm through perforin channels, or after Fas (CD95) or tumor necrosis factor (TNF) receptor 1 (TNFR1) ligation. The generation of caspase-3 (CPP32) appears to be a pivotal step, since this enzyme mediates both the activation of CAD (caspase-activated deoxyribonuclease) and PS externalization.8,13 A number of determinants, including PS, are expressed in apoptotic cells and derived fragments for their noninflammatory engulfment by phagocytes, whereas tissue necrosis is accompanied by proinflammatory events.9,11,14,15 Despite extensive investigations, major gaps still exist in trying to connect and define the relative contribution of the different components of this basic process, but recently, apoptotic features have been described in unicellular, primitive eukaryotes, such as yeast,16,17 which could be used as model organisms to expand our knowledge. Owing to the presence of the effector machinery for programmed cell death in virtually all nucleated cell types, it is obvious that mechanisms have evolved in parallel for a tight regulation of apoptosis, as detailed in most of the references quoted in this section.In such an active context, the impact of apoptosis has not escaped the attention of cardiovascular biologists. Recent reviews emphasize the role of programmed cell death in cardiac development, heart failure and ischemic heart disease,18-21 and in vascular disease. Of these, a majority deal with atherosclerosis and concern endothelial or smooth muscle cells and leukocytes.22-25 To avoid redundancy, then, the purpose of the present state-of-the-art review is to focus on aspects related to plasma membrane modifications contributing to the acquisition of hemorrhagic or thrombogenic phenotypes or to the development of (auto)immune response, in vitro and in vivo, in the vascular compartment.
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13

Newman, Laura E., i Gerald S. Shadel. "Mitochondrial DNA Release in Innate Immune Signaling". Annual Review of Biochemistry 92, nr 1 (31.03.2023). http://dx.doi.org/10.1146/annurev-biochem-032620-104401.

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According to the endosymbiotic theory, most of the DNA of the original bacterial endosymbiont has been lost or transferred to the nucleus, leaving a much smaller (∼16 kb in mammals), circular molecule that is the present-day mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA). The ability of mtDNA to escape mitochondria and integrate into the nuclear genome was discovered in budding yeast, along with genes that regulate this process. Mitochondria have emerged as key regulators of innate immunity, and it is now recognized that mtDNA released into the cytoplasm, outside of the cell, or into circulation activates multiple innate immune signaling pathways. Here, we first review the mechanisms through which mtDNA is released into the cytoplasm, including several inducible mitochondrial pores and defective mitophagy or autophagy. Next, we cover how the different forms of released mtDNA activate specific innate immune nucleic acid sensors and inflammasomes. Finally, we discuss how intracellular and extracellular mtDNA release, including circulating cell-free mtDNA that promotes systemic inflammation, are implicated in human diseases, bacterial and viral infections, and senescence and aging. Expected final online publication date for the Annual Review of Biochemistry, Volume 92 is June 2023. Please see http://www.annualreviews.org/page/journal/pubdates for revised estimates.
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14

Tucey, Timothy M., Jiyoti Verma-Gaur, Julie Nguyen, Victoria L. Hewitt, Tricia L. Lo, Miguel Shingu-Vazquez, Avril A. B. Robertson i in. "The Endoplasmic Reticulum-Mitochondrion Tether ERMES Orchestrates Fungal Immune Evasion, Illuminating Inflammasome Responses to Hyphal Signals". mSphere 1, nr 3 (25.05.2016). http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/msphere.00074-16.

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ABSTRACT The yeast Candida albicans causes human infections that have mortality rates approaching 50%. The key to developing improved therapeutics is to understand the host-pathogen interface. A critical interaction is that with macrophages: intracellular Candida triggers the NLRP3/caspase-1 inflammasome for escape through lytic host cell death, but this also activates antifungal responses. To better understand how the inflammasome response to Candida is fine-tuned, we established live-cell imaging of inflammasome activation at single-cell resolution, coupled with analysis of the fungal ERMES complex, a mitochondrial regulator that lacks human homologs. We show that ERMES mediates Candida escape via inflammasome-dependent processes, and our data suggest that inflammasome activation is controlled by the level of hyphal growth and exposure of cell wall components as a proxy for severity of danger. Our study provides the most detailed dynamic analysis of inflammasome responses to a fungal pathogen so far and establishes promising pathogen- and host-derived therapeutic strategies. The pathogenic yeast Candida albicans escapes macrophages by triggering NLRP3 inflammasome-dependent host cell death (pyroptosis). Pyroptosis is inflammatory and must be tightly regulated by host and microbe, but the mechanism is incompletely defined. We characterized the C. albicans endoplasmic reticulum (ER)-mitochondrion tether ERMES and show that the ERMES mmm1 mutant is severely crippled in killing macrophages despite hyphal formation and normal phagocytosis and survival. To understand dynamic inflammasome responses to Candida with high spatiotemporal resolution, we established live-cell imaging for parallel detection of inflammasome activation and pyroptosis at the single-cell level. This showed that the inflammasome response to mmm1 mutant hyphae is delayed by 10 h, after which an exacerbated activation occurs. The NLRP3 inhibitor MCC950 inhibited inflammasome activation and pyroptosis by C. albicans, including exacerbated inflammasome activation by the mmm1 mutant. At the cell biology level, inactivation of ERMES led to a rapid collapse of mitochondrial tubular morphology, slow growth and hyphal elongation at host temperature, and reduced exposed 1,3-β-glucan in hyphal populations. Our data suggest that inflammasome activation by C. albicans requires a signal threshold dependent on hyphal elongation and cell wall remodeling, which could fine-tune the response relative to the level of danger posed by C. albicans. The phenotypes of the ERMES mutant and the lack of conservation in animals suggest that ERMES is a promising antifungal drug target. Our data further indicate that NLRP3 inhibition by MCC950 could modulate C. albicans-induced inflammation. IMPORTANCE The yeast Candida albicans causes human infections that have mortality rates approaching 50%. The key to developing improved therapeutics is to understand the host-pathogen interface. A critical interaction is that with macrophages: intracellular Candida triggers the NLRP3/caspase-1 inflammasome for escape through lytic host cell death, but this also activates antifungal responses. To better understand how the inflammasome response to Candida is fine-tuned, we established live-cell imaging of inflammasome activation at single-cell resolution, coupled with analysis of the fungal ERMES complex, a mitochondrial regulator that lacks human homologs. We show that ERMES mediates Candida escape via inflammasome-dependent processes, and our data suggest that inflammasome activation is controlled by the level of hyphal growth and exposure of cell wall components as a proxy for severity of danger. Our study provides the most detailed dynamic analysis of inflammasome responses to a fungal pathogen so far and establishes promising pathogen- and host-derived therapeutic strategies.
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Cui, Shuna, Minghui Li, Rabeay Y. A. Hassan, Anna Heintz-Buschart, Junsong Wang i Ursula Bilitewski. "Inhibition of Respiration of Candida albicans by Small Molecules Increases Phagocytosis Efficacy by Macrophages". mSphere 5, nr 2 (15.04.2020). http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/msphere.00016-20.

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ABSTRACT Candida albicans adapts to various conditions in different body niches by regulating gene expression, protein synthesis, and metabolic pathways. These adaptive reactions not only allow survival but also influence the interaction with host cells, which is governed by the composition and structure of the fungal cell wall. Numerous studies had shown linkages between mitochondrial functionality, cell wall integrity and structure, and pathogenicity. Thus, we decided to inhibit single complexes of the respiratory chain of C. albicans and to analyze the resultant interaction with macrophages via their phagocytic activity. Remarkably, inhibition of the fungal bc1 complex by antimycin A increased phagocytosis, which correlated with an increased accessibility of β-glucans. To contribute to mechanistic insights, we performed metabolic studies, which highlighted significant changes in the abundance of constituents of the plasma membrane. Collectively, our results reinforce the strong linkage between fungal energy metabolism and other components of fungal physiology, which also determine the vulnerability to immune defense reactions. IMPORTANCE The yeast Candida albicans is one of the major fungal human pathogens, for which new therapeutic approaches are required. We aimed at enhancements of the phagocytosis efficacy of macrophages by targeting the cell wall structure of C. albicans, as the coverage of the β-glucan layer by mannans is one of the immune escape mechanisms of the fungus. We unambiguously show that inhibition of the fungal bc1 complex correlates with increased accessibilities of β-glucans and improved phagocytosis efficiency. Metabolic studies proved not only the known direct effects on reactive oxygen species (ROS) production and fermentative pathways but also the clear downregulation of the ergosterol pathway and upregulation of unsaturated fatty acids. The changed composition of the plasma membrane could also influence the interaction with the overlying cell wall. Thus, our work highlights the far-reaching relevance of energy metabolism, indirectly also for host-pathogen interactions, without affecting viability.
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