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Featured researches published by Claudia Abeijon.


Eukaryotic Cell | 2005

Yapsins Are a Family of Aspartyl Proteases Required for Cell Wall Integrity in Saccharomyces cerevisiae

Damian J. Krysan; Elizabeth L. Ting; Claudia Abeijon; Lee Kroos; Robert S. Fuller

ABSTRACT The yeast cell wall is a crucial extracellular organelle that protects the cell from lysis during environmental stress and morphogenesis. Here, we demonstrate that the yapsin family of five glycosylphosphatidylinositol-linked aspartyl proteases is required for cell wall integrity in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Yapsin null mutants show hypersensitivity to cell wall perturbation, and both the yps1Δ2Δ mutant and the quintuple yapsin mutant (5ypsΔ) undergo osmoremedial cell lysis at 37°C. The cell walls of both 5ypsΔ and yps1Δ2Δ mutants have decreased amounts of 1,3- and 1,6-β-glucan. Although there is decreased incorporation of both 1,3- and 1,6-β-glucan in the 5ypsΔ mutant in vivo, in vitro specific activity of both 1,3- and 1,6-β-glucan synthesis is similar to wild type, indicating that the yapsins affect processes downstream of glucan synthesis and that the yapsins may be involved in the incorporation or retention of cell wall glucan. Presumably as a response to the significant alterations in cell wall composition, the cell wall integrity mitogen-activated kinase signaling cascade (PKC1-MPK pathway) is basally active in 5ypsΔ. YPS1 expression is induced during cell wall stress and remodeling in a PKC1-MPK1-dependent manner, indicating that Yps1p is a direct, and important, output of the cell wall integrity response. The Candida albicans (SAP9) and Candida glabrata (CgYPS1) homologues of YPS1 complement the phenotypes of the yps1Δ mutant. Taken together, these data indicate that the yapsins play an important role in glucan homeostasis in S. cerevisiae and that yapsin homologues may play a similar role in the pathogenic yeasts C. albicans and C. glabrata.


Eukaryotic Cell | 2004

KRE5 Gene Null Mutant Strains of Candida albicans Are Avirulent and Have Altered Cell Wall Composition and Hypha Formation Properties

Ana B. Herrero; Paula Magnelli; Michael K. Mansour; Stuart M. Levitz; Howard Bussey; Claudia Abeijon

ABSTRACT The UDP-glucose:glycoprotein glucosyltransferase (UGGT) is an endoplasmic reticulum sensor for quality control of glycoprotein folding. Saccharomyces cerevisiae is the only eukaryotic organism so far described lacking UGGT-mediated transient reglucosylation of N-linked oligosaccharides. The only gene in S. cerevisiae with similarity to those encoding UGGTs is KRE5. S. cerevisiae KRE5 deletion strains show severely reduced levels of cell wall β-1,6-glucan polymer, aberrant morphology, and extremely compromised growth or lethality, depending on the strain background. Deletion of both alleles of the Candida albicans KRE5 gene gives rise to viable cells that are larger than those of the wild type (WT), tend to aggregate, have enlarged vacuoles, and show major cell wall defects. C. albicans kre5/kre5 mutants have significantly reduced levels of β-1,6-glucan and more chitin and β-1,3-glucan and less mannoprotein than the WT. The remaining β-1,6-glucan, about 20% of WT levels, exhibits a β-1,6-endoglucanase digestion pattern, including a branch point-to-linear stretch ratio identical to that of WT strains, suggesting that Kre5p is not a β-1,6-glucan synthase. C. albicans KRE5 is a functional homologue of S. cerevisiae KRE5; it partially complements both the growth defect and reduced cell wall β-1,6-glucan content of S. cerevisiae kre5 viable mutants. C. albicans kre5/kre5 homozygous mutant strains are unable to form hyphae in several solid and liquid media, even in the presence of serum, a potent inducer of the dimorphic transition. Surprisingly the mutants do form hyphae in the presence of N-acetylglucosamine. Finally, C. albicans KRE5 homozygous mutant strains exhibit a 50% reduction in adhesion to human epithelial cells and are completely avirulent in a mouse model of systemic infection.


Eukaryotic Cell | 2002

The Golgi GDPase of the Fungal Pathogen Candida albicans Affects Morphogenesis, Glycosylation, and Cell Wall Properties

Ana Herrero; Daniela Uccelletti; Carlos B. Hirschberg; Angel Domínguez; Claudia Abeijon

ABSTRACT Cell wall mannoproteins are largely responsible for the adhesive properties and immunomodulation ability of the fungal pathogen Candida albicans. The outer chain extension of yeast mannoproteins occurs in the lumen of the Golgi apparatus. GDP-mannose must first be transported from the cytosol into the Golgi lumen, where mannose is transferred to mannans. GDP is hydrolyzed by a GDPase, encoded by GDA1, to GMP, which then exits the Golgi lumen in a coupled, equimolar exchange with cytosolic GDP-mannose. We isolated and disrupted the C. albicans homologue of the Saccharomyces cerevisiae GDA1 gene in order to investigate its role in protein mannosylation and pathogenesis. CaGda1p shares four apyrase conserved regions with other nucleoside diphosphatases. Membranes prepared from the C. albicans disrupted gda1/gda1 strain had a 90% decrease in the ability to hydrolyze GDP compared to wild type. The gda1/gda1 mutants showed a severe defect in O-mannosylation and reduced cell wall phosphate content. Other cell wall-related phenotypes are present, such as elevated chitin levels and increased susceptibility to attack by β-1,3-glucanases. Our results show that the C. albicans organism contains β-mannose at their nonreducing end, differing from S. cerevisiae, which has only α-linked mannose residues in its O-glycans. Mutants lacking both alleles of GDA1 grow at the same rate as the wild type but are partially blocked in hyphal formation in Lee solid medium and during induction in liquid by changes in temperature and pH. However, the mutants still form normal hyphae in the presence of serum and N-acetylglucosamine and do not change their adherence to HeLa cells. Taken together, our data are in agreement with the hypothesis that several pathways regulate the yeast-hypha transition. Gda1/gda1 cells offer a model for discriminating among them.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1999

The genes for the Golgi apparatus N-acetylglucosaminyltransferase and the UDP-N-acetylglucosamine transporter are contiguous in Kluyveromyces lactis

Eduardo Guillen; Claudia Abeijon; Carlos B. Hirschberg

The mannan chains ofKluyveromyces lactis mannoproteins are similar to those ofSaccharomyces cerevisiae except that they lack mannose phosphate and have terminal α(1→2)-linkedN-acetylglucosamine. Previously, Smith et al.(Smith, W. L. Nakajima, T., and Ballou, C. E. (1975)J. Biol. Chem. 250, 3426–3435) characterized two mutants, mnn2–1 and mnn2–2, which lacked terminalN-acetylglucosamine in their mannoproteins. The former mutant lacks the Golgi N-acetylglucosaminyltransferase activity, whereas the latter one was recently found to be deficient in the Golgi UDP-GlcNAc transporter activity. Analysis of extensive crossings between the two mutants led Ballou and co-workers (reference cited above) to conclude that these genes were allelic or tightly linked. We have now cloned the gene encoding the K. lactis Golgi membrane N-acetylglucosaminyltransferase by complementation of the mnn2–1 mutation and named it GNT1. The mnn2–1 mutant was transformed with a 9.5-kilobase (kb) genomic fragment previously shown to contain the gene encoding the UDP-GlcNAc transporter; transformants were isolated, and phenotypic correction was monitored after cell surface labeling with fluorescein isothiocyanate-conjugated Griffonia simplicifolia II lectin, which binds terminal N-acetylglucosamine, and a fluorescence-activated cell sorter. The above 9.5-kb DNA fragment restored the wild-type lectin binding phenotype of the transferase mutant; further subcloning of this fragment yielded a smaller one containing an opening reading frame of 1,383 bases encoding a protein of 460 amino acids with an estimated molecular mass of 53 kDa, which also restored the wild-type phenotype. Transformants had also regained the ability to transfer N-acetylglucosamine to 3–0-α-d-mannopyranosyl-d-mannopyranoside. The gene encoding the above transferase was found to be approximately 1 kb upstream from the previously characterized MNN2 gene encoding the UDP-GlcNAc Golgi transporter. Each gene can be transcribed independently by their own promoter. To our knowledge this is the first demonstration of two Golgi apparatus functionally related genes being contiguous in a genome.


Annual Review of Biochemistry | 1998

Transporters of Nucleotide Sugars, ATP, and Nucleotide Sulfate in the Endoplasmic Reticulum and Golgi Apparatus

Carlos B. Hirschberg; Phillips W. Robbins; Claudia Abeijon


Journal of Cell Biology | 1993

Guanosine diphosphatase is required for protein and sphingolipid glycosylation in the Golgi lumen of Saccharomyces cerevisiae

Claudia Abeijon; Ken Yanagisawa; Elisabet C. Mandon; Alex Häusler; Kelley W. Moremen; Carlos B. Hirschberg; Phillips W. Robbins


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 1996

Molecular cloning of the Golgi apparatus uridine diphosphate-N-acetylglucosamine transporter from Kluyveromyces lactis.

Claudia Abeijon; Phillips W. Robbins; Carlos B. Hirschberg


Analytical Biochemistry | 2002

A Refined Method for the Determination of Saccharomyces cerevisiae Cell Wall Composition and β-1,6-Glucan Fine Structure

Paula Magnelli; John F. Cipollo; Claudia Abeijon


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2003

A Saccharomyces cerevisiae mutant with increased virulence

Robert T. Wheeler; Martin Kupiec; Paula Magnelli; Claudia Abeijon; Gerald R. Fink


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 1998

Mammalian Golgi apparatus UDP-N-acetylglucosamine transporter: Molecular cloning by phenotypic correction of a yeast mutant

Eduardo Guillen; Claudia Abeijon; Carlos B. Hirschberg

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Daniela Uccelletti

Sapienza University of Rome

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Gerald R. Fink

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Eduardo Guillen

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Ifat Rubin-Bejerano

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Ken Yanagisawa

Jichi Medical University

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