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Role of glutathione reductase in the differentiation of Candida albicans : Candida albicans의 분화에서 glutathione reductase의 역할

DC Field Value Language
dc.contributor.advisor강사욱-
dc.contributor.author구명희-
dc.date.accessioned2017-07-14T00:53:23Z-
dc.date.available2017-07-14T00:53:23Z-
dc.date.issued2017-02-
dc.identifier.other000000141362-
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/10371/121462-
dc.description학위논문 (박사)-- 서울대학교 대학원 : 생명과학부, 2017. 2. 강사욱.-
dc.description.abstractGlutathione reductase adequately maintains the glutathione level in a reduced state to regulate redox state. It was evidently confirmed that glutathione is required for cell growth and division, and its biosynthesizing-enzyme deficiency causes methylglyoxal accumulation. However, experimental evidence for reciprocal relationships between Cph1-/Efg1-mediated signaling pathway regulation and methylglyoxal production exerted from glycolysis pathway by glutathione reductase on yeast morphology, and the origin of methylglyoxal production remain unclear.
In this study, glutathione reductase (GLR1) mutants were used to examine aspects of pathological and morphological alterations in Candida albicans. These were proved by observations of cellular susceptibility to oxidants and thiols, and measurements of methylglyoxal, reactive oxygen species and glutathione content in hyphal-inducing conditions mainly through the activity of GLR1-overexpressing cells. Additionally, the transcriptional and translational levels of bioenergetic enzymes and dimorphism-regulating protein kinases were examined in the strain.
As expected, the GLR1-deficient strain was non-viable when GLR1 expression under the control of a CaMAL2 promoter was conditionally repressed even with various exogenous thiols. During filamentation, GLR1-overexpressing cells displayed non-hyphal growth and exhibited resistance against oxidants and the cellular methylglyoxal decrease significantly, which concomitantly increased expressions of genes encoding bioenergetic enzymes, including fructose-1,6-bisphosphate aldolase (FBA1), glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (TDH3), and alcohol dehydrogenase (ADH1), with remarkable repression of Efg1-signaling cascades.
Herein, GLR1 repressed Efg1-mediated signal transduction strictly to reduce morphological switching and virulence by maintaining the basal level of methylglyoxal following the high gene expressions of glycolytic enzymes and ADH1. The Efg1-mediated down-regulatory mechanism by GLR1 expression has possibilities to involve in other complex networks of signal pathways, especially glycolysis.
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dc.description.tableofcontentsI. Introduction 1
1. Candida albicans 2
1.1. Environmental cues affect C. albicans 2
1.2. Various virulence factors of C. albicans 3
1.3. Signal transduction pathways 3
1.4. Biosynthesis and degradation of methylglyoxal 4
1.5. Free radical generation by methylglyoxal 7
2. Glutathione 8
2.1. Properties of glutathione 8
2.2. Functions of glutathione 8
2.3. Glutathione reductase 9
3. Aims of Study 13
II. Materials and Methods 15
1. Materials 16
1.1. Yeast strains and growth conditions 16
1.2. Bacterial strain and culture condition 16
2. Methods 17
2.1. Lithium acetate transformation of C. albicans 17
2.2. Genetic manipulation methods 17
2.3. Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR) 18
2.4. RNA extraction and northern blot analysis 18
2.5. Quinoxaline derivatives and high pressure liquid chromatography analysis (HPLC) 19
2.6. Measurement of glutathione (GSH) concentration 19
2.7. Oxidant resistance assay and cell growth on various thiol compounds 23
2.8. Measurement of intracellular reactive oxygen species (ROS) concentration 24
2.9. Real-time RT-PCR 24
2.10. Western blot analysis 27
2.11. Glutathione reductase activity assay 27
2.12. Statistical analysis 28
III. Results and Discussions 29
1.GLR1 characteristics and its importance for cell growth in budding C. albicans 30
2.The resistance against oxidants or macrophage attack by non-hyphal forming GLR1-overexpressing cells 34
3. Non-hyphal growth and attenuate virulence by GLR1 overexpression 37
4.The Efg1-mediated signaling pathway involved in the non-hyphal phenotype triggered by GLR1 expression 47
5.Effects of GLR1 overexpression on cellular MG and ROS concentrations during hyphal formation 52
6.GLR1 alters gene expressions of glycolytic enzymes concomitantly with ADH1 during hyphal growth 58
IV. Conclusion 69
V. References 73
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dc.formatapplication/pdf-
dc.format.extent2517927 bytes-
dc.format.mediumapplication/pdf-
dc.language.isoen-
dc.publisher서울대학교 대학원-
dc.subjectGlutathione reductase-
dc.subjectglutathione-
dc.subjectmethylglyoxal-
dc.subjectfructose-1-
dc.subject6-bisphosphate aldolase-
dc.subjectEfg1-mediated cyclic AMP/protein kinase A pathways-
dc.subjectCandida albicans-
dc.subject.ddc570-
dc.titleRole of glutathione reductase in the differentiation of Candida albicans-
dc.title.alternativeCandida albicans의 분화에서 glutathione reductase의 역할-
dc.typeThesis-
dc.description.degreeDoctor-
dc.citation.pagesviii, 87-
dc.contributor.affiliation자연과학대학 생명과학부-
dc.date.awarded2017-02-
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