27 research outputs found
The effect of L-DOPA on Cryptococcus neoformans growth and gene expression
Cryptococcus neoformans is unusual among melanotic fungi in that it requires an exogenous supply of precursor to synthesize melanin. C. neoformans melanizes during mammalian infection in a process that presumably uses host-supplied compounds such as catecholamines. L-3,4-dihydroxyphenylalanine (L-DOPA) is a natural catecholamine that is frequently used to induce melanization in C. neoformans and L-DOPA-melanized cryptococci manifest resistance to radiation, phagocytosis, detergents and heavy metals. Given that C. neoformans needs exogenous substrate for melanization one question in the field is the extent to which melanin-associated phenotypes reflect the presence of melanin or metabolic changes in response to substrates. In this study we analyze the response of C. neoformans to L-DOPA with respect to melanization, gene expression and metabolic incorporation. Increasing the concentration of L-DOPA promotes melanin formation up to concentrations >1 mM, after which toxicity is apparent as manifested by reduced growth. The timing of C. neoformans cells to melanization is affected by growth phase and cell density. Remarkably, growth of C. neoformans in the presence of L-DOPA results in the induction of relatively few genes, most of which could be related to stress metabolism. We interpret these results to suggest that the biological effects associated with melanization after growth in L-DOPA are largely due to the presence of the pigment. This in turn provides strong support for the view that melanin contributes to virulence directly through its presence in the cell wall
Designer protein assemblies with tunable phase diagrams in living cells
Protein self-organization is a hallmark of biological systems. Although the physicochemical principles governing protein–protein interactions have long been known, the principles by which such nanoscale interactions generate diverse phenotypes of mesoscale assemblies, including phase-separated compartments, remain challenging to characterize. To illuminate such principles, we create a system of two proteins designed to interact and form mesh-like assemblies. We devise a new strategy to map high-resolution phase diagrams in living cells, which provide self-assembly signatures of this system. The structural modularity of the two protein components allows straightforward modification of their molecular properties, enabling us to characterize how interaction affinity impacts the phase diagram and material state of the assemblies in vivo. The phase diagrams and their dependence on interaction affinity were captured by theory and simulations, including out-of-equilibrium effects seen in growing cells. Finally, we find that cotranslational protein binding suffices to recruit a messenger RNA to the designed micron-scale structures