1887

Abstract

The adhesion of to host tissues contributes to its virulence, and adhesion to tissues or medical devices is a necessary step in biofilm formation. encodes a glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI)-anchored glucan-cross-linked cell wall protein that mediates adhesion of to various materials and cells, and appears to be required for biofilm formation and . In this study, we demonstrated that the Eap1p N-terminal signal peptide and C-terminal GPI-anchor sequences result in similar protein localization in and . To investigate the contribution of different Eap1p domains to adhesion, we expressed Eap1p domain deletion mutants in non-adherent strains. The N-terminal domain mediates yeast cell–cell adhesion and invasive growth. Two Ser/Thr-rich domains containing tandem repeats were required to project the N-terminal region into the extracellular environment and to mediate adhesion to polystyrene. The N-terminal tandem repeat domain mediated adhesion to mammalian epithelial cells and promoted pseudohyphal growth. These results suggest a modular structure of Eap1p in which each domain serves multiple, often distinct, functions.

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2008-04-01
2024-03-28
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