Aspergillus fumigatus Photobiology Illuminates the Marked Heterogeneity between Isolates

The given strain of Aspergillus fumigatus under study varies across laboratories, ranging from a few widely used “standards,” e.g., Af293 or CEA10, to locally acquired isolates that may be unique to one investigator. Since experiments concerning physiology or gene function are seldom replicated by o...

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Main Authors: Kevin K. Fuller, Robert A. Cramer, Michael E. Zegans, Jay C. Dunlap, Jennifer J. Loros
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: American Society for Microbiology 2016-09-01
Series:mBio
Online Access:http://mbio.asm.org/cgi/content/full/7/5/e01517-16
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spelling doaj-6540873f9b594bd3ba97ec5818c818ae2021-07-02T04:04:43ZengAmerican Society for MicrobiologymBio2150-75112016-09-0175e01517-1610.1128/mBio.01517-16Aspergillus fumigatus Photobiology Illuminates the Marked Heterogeneity between IsolatesKevin K. FullerRobert A. CramerMichael E. ZegansJay C. DunlapJennifer J. LorosThe given strain of Aspergillus fumigatus under study varies across laboratories, ranging from a few widely used “standards,” e.g., Af293 or CEA10, to locally acquired isolates that may be unique to one investigator. Since experiments concerning physiology or gene function are seldom replicated by others, i.e., in a different A. fumigatus background, the extent to which behavioral heterogeneity exists within the species is poorly understood. As a proxy for assessing such intraspecies variability, we analyzed the light response of 15 A. fumigatus isolates and observed striking quantitative and qualitative heterogeneity among them. The majority of the isolates fell into one of two seemingly mutually exclusive groups: (i) “photopigmenters” that robustly accumulate hyphal melanin in the light and (ii) “photoconidiators” that induce sporulation in the light. These two distinct responses were both governed by the same upstream blue light receptor, LreA, indicating that a specific protein’s contribution can vary in a strain-dependent manner. Indeed, while LreA played no apparent role in regulating cell wall homeostasis in strain Af293, it was essential in that regard in strain CEA10. The manifest heterogeneity in the photoresponses led us to compare the virulence levels of selected isolates in a murine model; remarkably, the virulence did vary greatly, although not in a manner that correlated with their overt light response. Taken together, these data highlight the extent to which isolates of A. fumigatus can vary, with respect to both broad physiological characteristics (e.g., virulence and photoresponse) and specific protein functionality (e.g., LreA-dependent phenotypes).http://mbio.asm.org/cgi/content/full/7/5/e01517-16
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kevin K. Fuller
Robert A. Cramer
Michael E. Zegans
Jay C. Dunlap
Jennifer J. Loros
spellingShingle Kevin K. Fuller
Robert A. Cramer
Michael E. Zegans
Jay C. Dunlap
Jennifer J. Loros
Aspergillus fumigatus Photobiology Illuminates the Marked Heterogeneity between Isolates
mBio
author_facet Kevin K. Fuller
Robert A. Cramer
Michael E. Zegans
Jay C. Dunlap
Jennifer J. Loros
author_sort Kevin K. Fuller
title Aspergillus fumigatus Photobiology Illuminates the Marked Heterogeneity between Isolates
title_short Aspergillus fumigatus Photobiology Illuminates the Marked Heterogeneity between Isolates
title_full Aspergillus fumigatus Photobiology Illuminates the Marked Heterogeneity between Isolates
title_fullStr Aspergillus fumigatus Photobiology Illuminates the Marked Heterogeneity between Isolates
title_full_unstemmed Aspergillus fumigatus Photobiology Illuminates the Marked Heterogeneity between Isolates
title_sort aspergillus fumigatus photobiology illuminates the marked heterogeneity between isolates
publisher American Society for Microbiology
series mBio
issn 2150-7511
publishDate 2016-09-01
description The given strain of Aspergillus fumigatus under study varies across laboratories, ranging from a few widely used “standards,” e.g., Af293 or CEA10, to locally acquired isolates that may be unique to one investigator. Since experiments concerning physiology or gene function are seldom replicated by others, i.e., in a different A. fumigatus background, the extent to which behavioral heterogeneity exists within the species is poorly understood. As a proxy for assessing such intraspecies variability, we analyzed the light response of 15 A. fumigatus isolates and observed striking quantitative and qualitative heterogeneity among them. The majority of the isolates fell into one of two seemingly mutually exclusive groups: (i) “photopigmenters” that robustly accumulate hyphal melanin in the light and (ii) “photoconidiators” that induce sporulation in the light. These two distinct responses were both governed by the same upstream blue light receptor, LreA, indicating that a specific protein’s contribution can vary in a strain-dependent manner. Indeed, while LreA played no apparent role in regulating cell wall homeostasis in strain Af293, it was essential in that regard in strain CEA10. The manifest heterogeneity in the photoresponses led us to compare the virulence levels of selected isolates in a murine model; remarkably, the virulence did vary greatly, although not in a manner that correlated with their overt light response. Taken together, these data highlight the extent to which isolates of A. fumigatus can vary, with respect to both broad physiological characteristics (e.g., virulence and photoresponse) and specific protein functionality (e.g., LreA-dependent phenotypes).
url http://mbio.asm.org/cgi/content/full/7/5/e01517-16
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