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CO2 Regulates White-to-Opaque Switching in Candida albicans

Abstract

SummaryTo mate, Candida albicans must undergo homozygosis at the mating type-like locus MTL [1, 2], then switch from the white to opaque phenotype [3, 4]. Paradoxically, when opaque cells are transferred in vitro to 37°C, the temperature of their animal host, they switch en masse to white [5–7], suggesting that their major niche might not be conducive to mating. It has been suggested that pheromones secreted by opaque cells of opposite mating type [8] or the hypoxic condition of host niches [9, 10] stabilize opaque cells. There is, however, an additional possibility, namely that CO2, which achieves levels in the host 100 times higher than in air [11–13], stabilizes the opaque phenotype. CO2 has been demonstrated to regulate the bud-hypha transition in C. albicans [14, 15], expression of virulence genes in bacteria [16], and mating events in Cryptococcus neoformans [14, 17]. We tested the possibility that CO2 stabilizes the opaque phenotype, and found that physiological levels of CO2 induce white-to-opaque switching and stabilize the opaque phenotype at 37°C. It exerts this control equally under anaerobic and aerobic conditions. These results suggest that the high levels of CO2 in the host induce and stabilize the opaque phenotype, thus facilitating mating

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This paper was published in Elsevier - Publisher Connector .

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