Aneuploidy Mediates Rapid Adaptation to a Subinhibitory Amount of Fluconazole in Candida albicans

Candida albicans is a prevalent, opportunistic, human fungal pathogen. Antifungal drug resistance and tolerance are two distinct mechanisms of adaptation to drugs. Studies of mechanisms of drug resistance are limited to the applications of high doses of drugs. Few studies have investigated the effec...

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Veröffentlicht in:Microbiology spectrum 2023-02, Vol.11 (2), p.e0301622-e0301622
Hauptverfasser: Sun, Liu-Liu, Li, Hao, Yan, Tian-Hua, Fang, Ting, Wu, Hao, Cao, Yong-Bing, Lu, Hui, Jiang, Yuan-Ying, Yang, Feng
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Candida albicans is a prevalent, opportunistic, human fungal pathogen. Antifungal drug resistance and tolerance are two distinct mechanisms of adaptation to drugs. Studies of mechanisms of drug resistance are limited to the applications of high doses of drugs. Few studies have investigated the effects of subinhibitory amounts of drugs on the development of drug resistance or tolerance. In this study, we found that growth in a subinhibitory amount of fluconazole (FLC), a widely used antifungal drug, for just a short time was sufficient to induce aneuploidy in C. albicans. Surprisingly, the aneuploids displayed fitness loss in the presence of subinhibitory FLC, but a subpopulation of cells could tolerate up to 128 μg/mL FLC. Particular aneuploidy (ChrR trisomy) caused tolerance, not resistance, to FLC. In the absence of FLC, the aneuploids were unstable. Depending on the karyotype, aneuploids might become completely euploid or maintain particular aneuploidy, and, accordingly, the tolerance would be lost or maintained. Mechanistically, subinhibitory FLC was sufficient to induce the expression of several genes and as well as the drug efflux gene . Aneuploids had a constitutive high-level expression of genes on and outside the aneuploid chromosomes, including most of the genes as well as the drug efflux genes and . Therefore, aneuploids were prepared for FLC challenges. In summary, aneuploidy provides a rapid and reversible strategy of adaptation when C. albicans is challenged with subinhibitory concentrations of FLC. Genome instability is a hallmark of C. albicans. Aneuploidy usually causes fitness loss in the absence of stress but confers better fitness under particular stress conditions. Therefore, aneuploidy is considered to be a double-edged sword. Here, we extend the understanding of aneuploidy. We found that aneuploidy arose under weak stress conditions but that it did not confer better fitness to the stress. Instead, it was less fit than its euploid counterparts. If the stress was withdrawn, aneuploidy spontaneously reverted to euploidy. If the stress became stronger, aneuploidy enabled subpopulation growth in a dose-independent manner of the stress. Therefore, we posit that aneuploidy enables the rapid and reversible development of drug tolerance in C. albicans. Further studies are required to investigate whether this is a general mechanism in human fungal pathogens.
ISSN:2165-0497
2165-0497
DOI:10.1128/spectrum.03016-22