Keyword search (4,163 papers available)

"Whiteway M" Authored Publications:

Title Authors PubMed ID
1 Tri-Functional CRISPR Screen Reveals Overexpression of em QDR2 /em and em QDR3 /em Transporters Increase Fumaric Acid Production in em Kluyveromyces marxianus /em Thornbury M; Omran RP; Kumar L; Knoops A; Abushahin R; Whiteway M; Martin VJJ; 41277095
BIOLOGY
2 Characterization of ORF19.7608 (PPP1), a biofilm-induced gene of Candida albicans Iwuchukwu NC; Costa ACBPD; Law C; Kim MJ; Mitchell AP; Whiteway M; 41218072
BIOLOGY
3 Impairing the interaction between Erg11 and cytochrome P450 reductase Ncp1 enhances azoles antifungal activities Li W; Whiteway M; Hang S; Yu J; Lu H; Jiang Y; 40707518
BIOLOGY
4 Sequencing of a Dairy Isolate Unlocks em Kluyveromyces marxianus /em as a Host for Lactose Valorization Thornbury M; Knoops A; Summerby-Murray I; Dhaliwal J; Johnson S; Utomo JC; Joshi J; Narcross L; Remondetto G; Pouliot M; Whiteway M; Martin VJJ; 40629255
BIOLOGY
5 em Candida albicans /em : a historical overview of investigations into an important human pathogen Shrivastava M; Whiteway M; 40522159
BIOLOGY
6 Otilonium Bromide Exhibits Potent Antifungal Effects by Blocking Ergosterol Plasma Membrane Localization and Triggering Cytotoxic Autophagy in Candida Albicans Zhen C; Wang L; Feng Y; Whiteway M; Hang S; Yu J; Lu H; Jiang Y; 38995235
BIOLOGY
7 Pitavastatin Calcium Confers Fungicidal Properties to Fluconazole by Inhibiting Ubiquinone Biosynthesis and Generating Reactive Oxygen Species Li W; Feng Y; Feng Z; Wang L; Whiteway M; Lu H; Jiang Y; 38929106
BIOLOGY
8 Alternative Oxidase: From Molecule and Function to Future Inhibitors Li J; Yang S; Wu Y; Wang R; Liu Y; Liu J; Ye Z; Tang R; Whiteway M; Lv Q; Yan L; 38524433
BIOLOGY
9 Understanding Fluconazole Tolerance in Candida albicans: Implications for Effective Treatment of Candidiasis and Combating Invasive Fungal Infections Feng Y; Lu H; Whiteway M; Jiang Y; 37918789
BIOLOGY
10 Candida albicans exhibits heterogeneous and adaptive cytoprotective responses to anti-fungal compounds Dumeaux V; Massahi S; Bettauer V; Mottola A; Dukovny A; Khurdia SS; Costa ACBP; Omran RP; Simpson S; Xie JL; Whiteway M; Berman J; Hallett MT; 37888959
BIOLOGY
11 The Adr1 transcription factor directs regulation of the ergosterol pathway and azole resistance in Candida albicans Shrivastava M; Kouyoumdjian GS; Kirbizakis E; Ruiz D; Henry M; Vincent AT; Sellam A; Whiteway M; 37791798
BIOLOGY
12 Genome sequencing of 15 acid-tolerant yeasts Bagley JA; Pyne ME; Exley K; Kevvai K; Wang Q; Whiteway M; Martin VJJ; 37747226
BIOLOGY
13 Screening non-conventional yeasts for acid tolerance and engineering Pichia occidentalis for production of muconic acid Pyne ME; Bagley JA; Narcross L; Kevvai K; Exley K; Davies M; Wang Q; Whiteway M; Martin VJJ; 37652930
BIOLOGY
14 Candidiasis: from cutaneous to systemic, new perspectives of potential targets and therapeutic strategies Lu H; Hong T; Jiang Y; Whiteway M; Zhang S; 37307922
BIOLOGY
15 A Small Molecule Inhibitor of Erg251 Makes Fluconazole Fungicidal by Inhibiting the Synthesis of the 14α-Methylsterols Lu H; Li W; Whiteway M; Wang H; Zhu S; Ji Z; Feng Y; Yan L; Fang T; Li L; Ni T; Zhang X; Lv Q; Ding Z; Qiu L; Zhang D; Jiang Y; 36475771
BIOLOGY
16 Rosemary essential oil and its components 1,8-cineole and α-pinene induce ROS-dependent lethality and ROS-independent virulence inhibition in Candida albicans Shahina Z; Al Homsi R; Price JDW; Whiteway M; Sultana T; Dahms TES; 36383525
CSFG
17 A Deep Learning Approach to Capture the Essence of Candida albicans Morphologies Bettauer V; Costa ACBP; Omran RP; Massahi S; Kirbizakis E; Simpson S; Dumeaux V; Law C; Whiteway M; Hallett MT; 35972285
BIOLOGY
18 Transcriptional Profiling of the Candida albicans Response to the DNA Damage Agent Methyl Methanesulfonate Feng Y; Zhang Y; Li J; Omran RP; Whiteway M; Feng J; 35886903
BIOLOGY
19 The MyLo CRISPR-Cas9 Toolkit: A Markerless Yeast Localization and Overexpression CRISPR-Cas9 Toolkit Bean BDM; Whiteway M; Martin VJJ; 35708612
BIOLOGY
20 Functional expression of opioid receptors and other human GPCRs in yeast engineered to produce human sterols Bean BDM; Mulvihill CJ; Garge RK; Boutz DR; Rousseau O; Floyd BM; Cheney W; Gardner EC; Ellington AD; Marcotte EM; Gollihar JD; Whiteway M; Martin VJJ; 35610225
BIOLOGY
21 Genetic Screening of Candida albicans Inactivation Mutants Identifies New Genes Involved in Macrophage-Fungal Cell Interactions Godoy P; Darlington PJ; Whiteway M; 35450285
PERFORM
22 SAGA Complex Subunits in Candida albicans Differentially Regulate Filamentation, Invasiveness, and Biofilm Formation Rashid S; Correia-Mesquita TO; Godoy P; Omran RP; Whiteway M; 35350439
BIOLOGY
23 The zinc cluster transcription factor Rha1 is a positive filamentation regulator in Candida albicans Omran RP; Ramírez-Zavala B; Aji Tebung W; Yao S; Feng J; Law C; Dumeaux V; Morschhäuser J; Whiteway M; 34849863
PERFORM
24 Signal-mediated localization of Candida albicans pheromone response pathway components Costa ACBP; Omran RP; Law C; Dumeaux V; Whiteway M; 33793759
PERFORM
25 Candida albicans targets that potentially synergize with fluconazole. Lu H, Shrivastava M, Whiteway M, Jiang Y 33587857
BIOLOGY
26 Loss of Arp1, a putative actin-related protein, triggers filamentous and invasive growth and impairs pathogenicity in Candida albicans. Yao S, Feng Y, Islam A, Shrivastava M, Gu H, Lu Y, Sheng J, Whiteway M, Feng J 33363697
BIOLOGY
27 Nucleotide Excision Repair Protein Rad23 Regulates Cell Virulence Independent of Rad4 in Candida albicans. Feng J, Yao S, Dong Y, Hu J, Whiteway M, Feng J 32075883
BIOLOGY
28 Hof1 plays a checkpoint related role in MMS induced DNA damage response in Candida albicans. Feng J, Islam A, Bean B, Feng J, Sparapani S, Shrivastava M, Goyal A, Omran RP, Mallick J, Whiteway M 31940254
BIOLOGY
29 RNA sequencing reveals an additional Crz1-binding motif in promoters of its target genes in the human fungal pathogen Candida albicans. Xu H, Fang T, Omran RP, Whiteway M, Jiang L 31900175
BIOLOGY
30 Screening of Candida albicans GRACE library revealed a unique pattern of biofilm formation under repression of the essential gene ILS1. Costa ACBP, Omran RP, Correia-Mesquita TO, Dumeaux V, Whiteway M 31235750
PERFORM
31 The Genomic Landscape of the Fungus-Specific SWI/SNF Complex Subunit, Snf6, in Candida albicans. Tebbji F, Chen Y, Sellam A, Whiteway M 29152582
BIOLOGY
32 Chemogenomic Profiling of the Fungal Pathogen Candida albicans. Chen Y, Mallick J, Maqnas A, Sun Y, Choudhury BI, Côte P, Yan L, Ni TJ, Li Y, Zhang D, Rodríguez-Ortiz R, Lv QZ, Jiang YY, Whiteway M 29203491
BIOLOGY
33 Epigenetic control of pheromone MAPK signaling determines sexual fecundity in Candida albicans. Scaduto CM, Kabrawala S, Thomson GJ, Scheving W, Ly A, Anderson MZ, Whiteway M, Bennett RJ 29255038
BIOLOGY
34 Evolutionary Transition of GAL Regulatory Circuit from Generalist to Specialist Function in Ascomycetes. Choudhury BI, Whiteway M 29395731
BIOLOGY
35 Erratum for Chen et al., "Chemogenomic Profiling of the Fungal Pathogen Candida albicans". Chen Y, Mallick J, Maqnas A, Sun Y, Choudhury BI, Côte P, Yan L, Ni TJ, Li Y, Zhang D, Rodríguez-Ortiz R, Lv QZ, Jiang YY, Whiteway M 29588354
BIOLOGY
36 Tuning Hsf1 levels drives distinct fungal morphogenetic programs with depletion impairing Hsp90 function and overexpression expanding the target space. Veri AO, Miao Z, Shapiro RS, Tebbji F, O'Meara TR, Kim SH, Colazo J, Tan K, Vyas VK, Whiteway M, Robbins N, Wong KH, Cowen LE 29590106
BIOLOGY
37 Functional divergence of a global regulatory complex governing fungal filamentation. Polvi EJ, Veri AO, Liu Z, Hossain S, Hyde S, Kim SH, Tebbji F, Sellam A, Todd RT, Xie JL, Lin ZY, Wong CJ, Shapiro RS, Whiteway M, Robbins N, Gingras AC, Selmecki A, Cowen LE 30615616
BIOLOGY
38 The adaptor protein Ste50 directly modulates yeast MAPK signaling specificity through differential connections of its RA domain. Sharmeen N, Sulea T, Whiteway M, Wu C 30650049
BIOLOGY
39 MAP Kinase Regulation of the Candida albicans Pheromone Pathway. Rastghalam G, Omran RP, Alizadeh M, Fulton D, Mallick J, Whiteway M 30787119
BIOLOGY
40 The evolutionary rewiring of the ribosomal protein transcription pathway modifies the interaction of transcription factor heteromer Ifh1-Fhl1 (interacts with forkhead 1-forkhead-like 1) with the DNA-binding specificity element. Mallick J, Whiteway M 23625919
BIOLOGY
41 The tricarboxylic acid cycle, cell wall integrity pathway, cytokinesis and intracellular pH homeostasis are involved in the sensitivity of Candida albicans cells to high levels of extracellular calcium. Xu H, Whiteway M, Jiang L 30102968
BIOLOGY
42 Mms21: A Putative SUMO E3 Ligase in Candida albicans That Negatively Regulates Invasiveness and Filamentation, and Is Required for the Genotoxic and Cellular Stress Response. Islam A, Tebbji F, Mallick J, Regan H, Dumeaux V, Omran RP, Whiteway M 30530734
PERFORM
43 Rewiring of the Ppr1 Zinc Cluster Transcription Factor from Purine Catabolism to Pyrimidine Biogenesis in the Saccharomycetaceae. Tebung WA, Choudhury BI, Tebbji F, Morschhäuser J, Whiteway M 27321996
BIOLOGY
44 Beauvericin Potentiates Azole Activity via Inhibition of Multidrug Efflux, Blocks Candida albicans Morphogenesis, and Is Effluxed via Yor1 and Circuitry Controlled by Zcf29. Shekhar-Guturja T, Tebung WA, Mount H, Liu N, Köhler JR, Whiteway M, Cowen LE 27736764
BIOLOGY
45 Put3 Positively Regulates Proline Utilization in Candida albicans. Tebung WA, Omran RP, Fulton DL, Morschhäuser J, Whiteway M 29242833
BIOLOGY
46 Cinnamomum zeylanicum bark essential oil induces cell wall remodelling and spindle defects in Candida albicans. Shahina Z, El-Ganiny AM, Minion J, Whiteway M, Sultana T, Dahms TES 29456868
CHEMBIOCHEM

 

Title:MAP Kinase Regulation of the Candida albicans Pheromone Pathway.
Authors:Rastghalam GOmran RPAlizadeh MFulton DMallick JWhiteway M
Link:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30787119?dopt=Abstract
DOI:10.1128/mSphere.00598-18
Publication:mSphere
Keywords:Candida albicansGFP fusionsMAP kinase phosphatasesMAP kinasespheromone pathway
PMID:30787119 Category:mSphere Date Added:2019-06-07
Dept Affiliation: BIOLOGY
1 Department of Biology, Concordia University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada.
2 Department of Biology, Concordia University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada malcolm.whiteway@concordia.ca.

Description:

MAP Kinase Regulation of the Candida albicans Pheromone Pathway.

mSphere. 2019 02 20;4(1):

Authors: Rastghalam G, Omran RP, Alizadeh M, Fulton D, Mallick J, Whiteway M

Abstract

We investigated the relationships of the Cek1 and Cek2 mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinases and the putative MAP kinase phosphatase Cpp1 in the mating process of Candida albicans Mutants of the CPP1 gene are hyperresponsive to pheromone, generating large halos, high levels of projections, and an increase in pheromone-responsive gene expression. Mating-type-homozygous opaque cells that lack both kinases are sterile, consistent with previous observations, although several lines of evidence show that the two kinases do not simply provide redundant functions in the mating process. Loss of CEK1 reduces mating significantly, to about 0.3% of wild-type strains, and also reduces projection formation and pheromone-mediated gene expression. In contrast, loss of CEK2 has less of an effect, reducing mating to approximately one-third that of the wild-type strain and moderately reducing projection formation but having little influence on the induction of gene expression. However, loss of Cek2 function reduces adaptation to pheromone-mediated arrest. The mutation enhances pheromone response halos to a level similar to that of cpp1 mutants, although the cpp1 mutants are considerably more mating defective than the cek2 mutant. The double cek2 cpp1 mutant shows enhanced responsiveness relative to either single mutant in terms of gene expression and halo formation, suggesting the kinase and phosphatase roles in the adaptation process are independent. Analysis of protein phosphorylation shows that Cek1 undergoes pheromone-mediated phosphorylation of the activation loop, and this phosphorylation is enhanced in cells lacking either the Cpp1 phosphatase or the Cek2 kinase. In addition, Cek1-GFP shows enhanced nuclear localization in response to pheromone treatment. In contrast, Cek2 shows no evidence for pheromone-mediated phosphorylation or pheromone-mediated nuclear localization. Intriguingly, however, deletion of CPP1 enhances both the phosphorylation state and the nuclear localization of Cek2-GFP. Overall, these results identify a complex interaction among the MAP kinases and MAP kinase phosphatase that function in the C. albicans mating pathway.IMPORTANCE MAP kinases and their regulators are critical components of eukaryotic signaling pathways implicated in normal cell behavior as well as abnormal behaviors linked to diseases such as cancer. The mating pathway of the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae was central in establishing the MAP kinase paradigm. Here we investigate the mating pathway in a different ascomycete, the fungal pathogen C. albicans In this dimorphic fungus MAP kinases are also implicated in the mating response, with two MAP kinases apparently playing redundant roles in the mating process. This work establishes that while some level of mating can occur in the presence of a single kinase, the Cek1 kinase is most important for mating, while the Cek2 kinase is involved in adaptation to signaling. While both kinases appear to be themselves




BookR developed by Sriram Narayanan
for the Concordia University School of Health
Copyright © 2011-2026
Cookie settings
Concordia University