TY - JOUR
T1 - The sulfur-related metabolic status of Aspergillus fumigatus during infection reveals cytosolic serine hydroxymethyltransferase as a promising antifungal target
AU - Alharthi, Reem
AU - Sueiro-Olivares, Monica
AU - Storer, Isabelle
AU - Bin Shuraym, Hajer
AU - Scott, Jennifer
AU - Al-Shidhani, Reem
AU - Fortune-Grant, Rachael
AU - Bignell, Elaine
AU - Tabernero, Lydia
AU - Bromley, Michael
AU - Zhao, Can
AU - Amich, Jorge
N1 - Data availability statement: All NanoString data can be found at the Zenodo repository https://zenodo.org/records/13120359.
Funding information: R. Alharthi was funded by the Ministry of Education of Saudi Arabia. J Amich was funded by an MRC Career Development Award [MR/N008707/1] and currently by a Proyecto de Generación del Conocimiento of the Spanish Agencia Estatal de Investigación [PID2022-136343OA-I00]. M. Bromley was supported by the Wellcome Trust [grants: 219551/Z/19/Z and 208396/Z/17/Z]. These funders had no role in the design or analysis of the study.
PY - 2025
Y1 - 2025
N2 - Sulfur metabolism is an essential aspect of fungal physiology and pathogenicity. Fungal sulfur metabolism comprises anabolic and catabolic routes that are not well conserved in mammals, therefore is considered a promising source of prospective novel antifungal targets. To gain insight into Aspergillus fumigatus sulfur-related metabolism during infection, we used a NanoString custom nCounter-TagSet and compared the expression of 68 key metabolic genes in different murine models of invasive pulmonary aspergillosis, at 3 time-points, and under a variety of in vitro conditions. We identified a set of 15 genes that were consistently expressed at higher levels in vivo than in vitro, suggesting that they may be particularly relevant for intrapulmonary growth and thus constitute promising drug targets. Indeed, the role of 5 of the 15 genes has previously been empirically validated, supporting the likelihood that the remaining candidates are relevant. In addition, the analysis of gene expression dynamics at early (16 h), mid (24 h), and late (72 h) time-points uncovered potential disease initiation and progression factors. We further characterized one of the identified genes, encoding the cytosolic serine hydroxymethyltransferase ShmB, and demonstrated that it is an essential gene of A. fumigatus, also required for virulence in a murine model of established pulmonary infection. We further showed that the structure of the ligand-binding pocket of the fungal enzyme differs significantly from its human counterpart, suggesting that specific inhibitors can be designed. Therefore, in vivo transcriptomics is a powerful tool for identifying genes crucial for fungal pathogenicity that may encode promising antifungal target candidates.
AB - Sulfur metabolism is an essential aspect of fungal physiology and pathogenicity. Fungal sulfur metabolism comprises anabolic and catabolic routes that are not well conserved in mammals, therefore is considered a promising source of prospective novel antifungal targets. To gain insight into Aspergillus fumigatus sulfur-related metabolism during infection, we used a NanoString custom nCounter-TagSet and compared the expression of 68 key metabolic genes in different murine models of invasive pulmonary aspergillosis, at 3 time-points, and under a variety of in vitro conditions. We identified a set of 15 genes that were consistently expressed at higher levels in vivo than in vitro, suggesting that they may be particularly relevant for intrapulmonary growth and thus constitute promising drug targets. Indeed, the role of 5 of the 15 genes has previously been empirically validated, supporting the likelihood that the remaining candidates are relevant. In addition, the analysis of gene expression dynamics at early (16 h), mid (24 h), and late (72 h) time-points uncovered potential disease initiation and progression factors. We further characterized one of the identified genes, encoding the cytosolic serine hydroxymethyltransferase ShmB, and demonstrated that it is an essential gene of A. fumigatus, also required for virulence in a murine model of established pulmonary infection. We further showed that the structure of the ligand-binding pocket of the fungal enzyme differs significantly from its human counterpart, suggesting that specific inhibitors can be designed. Therefore, in vivo transcriptomics is a powerful tool for identifying genes crucial for fungal pathogenicity that may encode promising antifungal target candidates.
KW - antifungal targets
KW - Aspergillus fumigatus
KW - fungal virulence
KW - hydroxymethyltransferase
KW - in vivo transcriptomics
KW - sulfur metabolism
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85215530349&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1080/21505594.2024.2449075
DO - 10.1080/21505594.2024.2449075
M3 - Article
C2 - 39825596
AN - SCOPUS:85215530349
SN - 2150-5594
VL - 16
JO - Virulence
JF - Virulence
IS - 1
M1 - 2449075
ER -