Candida species, such as Candida albicans and Candida glabrata, cause infections at different host sites because they adapt their metabolism depending on the available nutrients. They are able to proliferate under both nutrient-rich and nutrient-poor conditions. This adaptation is what makes these fungi successful pathogens. For both species, sugars are very important nutrients and as the sugar level differs depending on the host niche, different sugar sensing systems must be present. Saccharomyces cerevisiae has been used as a model for the identification of these sugar sensing systems. One of the main carbon sources for yeast is glucose, for which three different pathways have been described. First, two transporter-like proteins, ScSnf3 and ScRgt2, sense glucose levels resulting in the induction of different hexose transporter genes. This situation is comparable in C. albicans and C. glabrata, where sensing of glucose by CaHgt4 and CgSnf3, respectively, also results in hexose transporter gene induction. The second glucose sensing mechanism in S. cerevisiae is via the G-protein coupled receptor ScGpr1, which causes the activation of the cAMP/PKA pathway, resulting in rapid adaptation to the presence of glucose. The main components of this glucose sensing system are also conserved in C. albicans and C. glabrata. However, it seems that the ligand(s) for CaGpr1 are not sugars but lactate and methionine. In C. glabrata, this pathway has not yet been investigated. Finally, the glucose repression pathway ensures repression of respiration and repression of the use of alternative carbon sources. This pathway is not well characterized in Candida species. It is important to note that, apart from glucose, other sugars and sugar-analogs, such as N-acetylglucosamine in the case of C. albicans, are also important carbon sources. In these fungal pathogens, sensing sugars is important for a number of virulence attributes, including adhesion, oxidative stress resistance, biofilm formation, morphogenesis, invasion, and antifungal drug tolerance. In this review, the sugar sensing and signaling mechanisms in these Candida species are compared to S. cerevisiae.
Whereas the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae shows great preference for glucose as a carbon source, a deletion mutant in trehalose-6-phosphate synthase, tps1Δ, is highly sensitive to even a few millimolar glucose, which triggers apoptosis and cell death. Glucose addition to tps1Δ cells causes deregulation of glycolysis with hyperaccumulation of metabolites upstream and depletion downstream of glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH). The apparent metabolic barrier at the level of GAPDH has been difficult to explain. We show that GAPDH isozyme deletion, especially Tdh3, further aggravates glucose sensitivity and metabolic deregulation of tps1Δ cells, but overexpression does not rescue glucose sensitivity. GAPDH has an unusually high pH optimum of 8.0 to 8.5, which is not altered by tps1Δ. Whereas glucose causes short, transient intracellular acidification in wild-type cells, in tps1Δ cells, it causes permanent intracellular acidification. The hxk2Δ and snf1Δ suppressors of tps1Δ restore the transient acidification. These results suggest that GAPDH activity in the tps1Δ mutant may be compromised by the persistently low intracellular pH. Addition of NH4Cl together with glucose at high extracellular pH to tps1Δ cells abolishes the pH drop and reduces glucose-6-phosphate (Glu6P) and fructose-1,6-bisphosphate (Fru1,6bisP) hyperaccumulation. It also reduces the glucose uptake rate, but a similar reduction in glucose uptake rate in a tps1Δ hxt2,4,5,6,7Δ strain does not prevent glucose sensitivity and Fru1,6bisP hyperaccumulation. Hence, our results suggest that the glucose-induced intracellular acidification in tps1Δ cells may explain, at least in part, the apparent glycolytic bottleneck at GAPDH but does not appear to fully explain the extreme glucose sensitivity of the tps1Δ mutant. IMPORTANCE Glucose catabolism is the backbone of metabolism in most organisms. In spite of numerous studies and extensive knowledge, major controls on glycolysis and its connections to the other metabolic pathways remain to be discovered. A striking example is provided by the extreme glucose sensitivity of the yeast tps1Δ mutant, which undergoes apoptosis in the presence of just a few millimolar glucose. Previous work has shown that the conspicuous glucose-induced hyperaccumulation of the glycolytic metabolite fructose-1,6-bisphosphate (Fru1,6bisP) in tps1Δ cells triggers apoptosis through activation of the Ras-cAMP-protein kinase A (PKA) signaling pathway. However, the molecular cause of this Fru1,6bisP hyperaccumulation has remained unclear. We now provide evidence that the persistent drop in intracellular pH upon glucose addition to tps1Δ cells likely compromises the activity of glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH), a major glycolytic enzyme downstream of Fru1,6bisP, due to its unusually high pH optimum. Our work highlights the potential importance of intracellular pH fluctuations for control of major metabolic pathways.
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