Previous Article | Next Article ![]()
Journal of Clinical Microbiology, March 2005, p. 1387-1389, Vol. 43, No. 3
0095-1137/05/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JCM.43.3.1387-1389.2005
Copyright © 2005, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Laboratoire de Parasitologie-Mycologie, Hôpital Henri Mondor-APHP and UMR BIPAR 956, Créteil,1 Laboratoire de Biologie Moléculaire, Hôpital Américain, Neuilly,2 Laboratoire de Parasitologie, Hôpital Mignot, Versailles,3 Unité de Mycologie Moléculaire, Institut Pasteur, Paris, France4
Received 2 April 2004/ Returned for modification 22 April 2004/ Accepted 19 October 2004
|
|
|---|
|
|
|---|
The microsatellite markers have the additional advantage of easily identifying the heterozygosity of diploid eucaryotes. Since C. albicans is diploid, when we observe electromorphs with one signal for a given locus, we infer that the isolates are homozygous for this locus (2, 4). However, distinction between a single allele and two homozygous alleles is difficult. A single allele could be due to the loss of one chromosome, deletion of the locus, or the lack of amplification of one of the two alleles. Knowing the number of copies of a given allele has consequences for the calculation of allelic frequencies in genetics of the C. albicans population. Moreover, a technique to quantify gene copy number may have some use in exploring the loss of heterozygosity observed in C. albicans (10).
Therefore, we sought to take advantage of quantitative real-time PCR to distinguish between one or two copies of the EF3 locus, for which we regularly observe electromorphs with one or two signals after amplification (2, 4). To validate our technique, we analyzed the Sor19 strain, monosomic for chromosome 5 and disomic for chromosome 1, and its original diploid CAF4-2 strain (8).
In a first step, two microsatellite markers known to be on chromosomes 5 and 1 were studied: the upstream sequence of the elongation factor 3 (EF3) gene, located on chromosome 5 (12), and the downstream sequence of the cell division cycle protein gene (CDC3), located on chromosome 1 (7). The primers, probes, PCR assays, and loci are subsequently referred to as EF3 and CDC3. The PCR and analysis were performed as previously described (2). The microsatellite marker analysis confirmed that the Sor19 strain had a single band of 123 bp at the EF3 locus in contrast to its original CAF4-2 strain, which had two bands at 123 and 132 bp, while both were heterozygous for the CDC3 locus with the same alleles being 117 and 125 bp in length (Fig. 1).
![]() View larger version (12K): [in a new window] |
FIG. 1. Electromorphs of the EF3 (black peaks) and CDC3 (gray peaks) microsatellite marker analysis of the Sor19 strain (A) and its original diploid CAF4-2 strain (B). The Sor19 strain monosomic for chromosome 5 has a single EF3 peak at 123 bp in contrast with the diploid original strain, which has two EF3 peaks at 123 and 132 bp. The empty peaks represent the internal size standards (from left to right: 75, 100, 139, 150, and 160 bp). The y axis shows fluorescence intensities in arbitrary units.
|
To generate a standard curve for each gene, we amplified serial dilutions of DNA of the CAF4-2 strain, diploid for both genes (Fig. 2). The second derivative maximum method automatically calculates the fractional cycle numbers, or crossing point, where the fluorescence rises above background. Crossing point values for a set of standards are expressed as a fractional cycle number that can be plotted against log concentration to give standard curves. These standard curves were used to calculate the relative starting template concentration of the unknown samples for both genes. Therefore, the results were expressed as a ratio of the EF3 to the CDC3 gene quantification, regardless of the precise amounts of input DNA. We obtained a crossing point value for the two loci. Then, we calculated the ratio N = starting copy number of EF3 gene/starting copy number of CDC3 gene. In this method, a two-copy gene for both loci is expected to yield a ratio of N = 1, as opposed to N = 0.5 when the EF3 gene is single copy. With three independent assays, the Sor19 strain had N = 0.44 ± 0.04, confirming its haploid feature for chromosome 5, whereas the original CAF4-2 strain had N = 0.98 ± 0.05.
![]() View larger version (17K): [in a new window] |
FIG. 2. Amplification plots and standard curves obtained for EF3 gene dosage (A and B) and for CDC3 gene dosage (C and D) with a LightCycler instrument (Roche Molecular Biochemicals) with the use of SYBR Green I for online measurement of PCR products. (A and C) Serial 10-fold dilutions in water of CAF4-2 C. albicans strain DNA, diploid for both genes; the amplification curves shift to the right as the input target quantity is reduced. (B and D) Standard curves obtained by plotting the cycle number against the input target quantity. For a given C. albicans isolate, these standard curves were used to calculate the ratio N = starting copy number of EF3 gene/starting copy number of CDC3 gene.
|
Here we propose for the first time two real-time RCR assays to assess the gene copy number of the diploid yeast C. albicans, as recently proposed for human genetics (9, 16). We targeted the gene close to the microsatellite for which the analysis showed a single signal. Therefore, the method does not depend on the polymorphisms of the microsatellite itself. The method is also independent of differences in the yield of the amplification reactions or in the quantity of DNA used for amplification, as the copy number of the allele is calculated as a ratio (N), which erases these differences. When N is close to 0.5, the allele is single copy; when N is close to 1, the allele has a double copy. Until now, we have observed only two copies of the EF3 allele when a single signal was observed, confirming that it is correct for allelic frequency calculation to consider the isolate homozygous and count two alleles. The loss of one allele in a given clinical specimen, as we observed in testing 20 CFU from a stool specimen, warrants additional studies. In particular, this phenomenon can be chromosome dependent. This phenomenon is also probably dependent on the rate of multiplication of the yeast and the pressure of antifungal drugs. When performing serial testing, we usually observed the same genotype in a given patient (15). This chromosomal loss and duplication may not be selected over time. This needs an extensive follow-up of patients but should give some clues to a better understanding of the reproductive system of C. albicans (1).
The real-time fluorescent PCR gene dosage assays that we have developed are an accurate, nonradioactive, relatively cheap and fast method for testing gene copy number in C. albicans. This method could be useful to elucidate some genetic evolution in C. albicans and to help accurate evaluation in epidemiological studies.
|
|
|---|
This article has been cited by other articles:
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Copyright © 2009 by the American Society for Microbiology. For an alternate route to Journals.ASM.org, visit: http://intl-journals.asm.org | More Info»