Abstract
The yeast Candida albicans is a human commensal and opportunistic pathogen. Although both commensalism and pathogenesis depend on metabolic adaptation, the regulatory pathways that mediate metabolic processes in C. albicans are incompletely defined. For example, metabolic change is a major feature that distinguishes community growth of C. albicans in biofilms compared to suspension cultures, but how metabolic adaptation is functionally interfaced with the structural and gene regulatory changes that drive biofilm maturation remains to be fully understood. We show here that the RNA binding protein Puf3 regulates a posttranscriptional mRNA network in C. albicans that impacts on mitochondrial biogenesis, and provide the first functional data suggesting evolutionary rewiring of posttranscriptional gene regulation between the model yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae and C. albicans. A proportion of the Puf3 mRNA network is differentially expressed in biofilms, and by using a mutant in the mRNA deadenylase CCR4 (the enzyme recruited to mRNAs by Puf3 to control transcript stability) we show that posttranscriptional regulation is important for mitochondrial regulation in biofilms. Inactivation of CCR4 or dis-regulation of mitochondrial activity led to altered biofilm structure and over-production of extracellular matrix material. The extracellular matrix is critical for antifungal resistance and immune evasion, and yet of all biofilm maturation pathways extracellular matrix biogenesis is the least understood. We propose a model in which the hypoxic biofilm environment is sensed by regulators such as Ccr4 to orchestrate metabolic adaptation, as well as the regulation of extracellular matrix production by impacting on the expression of matrix-related cell wall genes. Therefore metabolic changes in biofilms might be intimately linked to a key biofilm maturation mechanism that ultimately results in untreatable fungal disease.
Author Summary
Metabolism is a master regulator of cell biology, including gene regulation, developmental switches and cellular life-death decisions, with the mitochondrion playing a central role in eukaryotes. For the yeast Candida albicans mitochondrial functions have been implicated in host-pathogen interactions, but the regulatory mechanism that control mitochondrial biogenesis are poorly described. We identified the RNA binding protein Puf3 as a new mitochondrial regulator in C. albicans, and show that posttranscriptional regulation and mitochondrial function have important roles during community growth in biofilms. Perturbation of mitochondrial activity or inactivation of a key posttranscriptional regulator, CCR4, led to changes in biofilm maturation, shedding light on the interface between metabolic reprogramming and biofilm developmental pathways. We illuminate a new mechanism that regulates extracellular matrix production, an essential biofilm feature that mediates the notorious drug resistance and immune evasion properties of the biofilm growth mode.
Introduction
Metabolism is a key driver of cell growth and division, and has a widespread influence on cell function. For example, metabolites can regulate gene expression [1], metabolic enzymes can double as RNA binding proteins and regulate mRNA expression [2], and the “power house of eukaryotic cells”–the mitochondrion–plays diverse roles in nuclear gene expression control [3], as well as pathways of programmed cell death [4] and cellular aging [3,5]. We are studying mitochondrial functions in Candida albicans, a human commensal yeast known to cause serious infections in susceptible individuals [6]. Al Brown and colleagues have recently argued that metabolism should be put center stage for a holistic understanding of virulence and host interactions of human fungal pathogens [7]. C. albicans can inhabit several niches in the human body that differ in nutrient availability, and it has evolved sophisticated mechanisms to cope with changing nutrient environments. For example, C. albicans uses complex networks of transcriptional activators and repressors to modulate the switch from being a commensal inhabitant of the gastrointestinal (GI) tract, to becoming a pathogen localized in the blood stream [8,9]. Many of the target genes of these regulators relate to metabolic functions [8]. Like the majority of organisms, C. albicans is highly responsive to carbon source availability. Major metabolic remodeling, but also global changes in cell physiology including restructuring of the cell surface and host interactions, have been found when comparing C. albicans grown in the fermentative carbon source glucose with the non-fermentative carbon source lactate [10,11]. These carbon sources are found at varying concentrations in the GI tract, the vaginal tract and the bloodstream, and thus are relevant nutrients for C. albicans in host environments [7].
Metabolic control is linked to a critical virulence attribute of C. albicans—morphological plasticity, whereby this organism transitions between distinct cell types in response to environmental signals. One such developmental transition of central importance is substrate-attached growth of C. albicans in multicellular biofilm communities, a property that is highly relevant for virulence [12]. Biofilm formation involves several important phenotypic aspects, such as adherence, cell surface restructuring, the yeast-to-hyphae morphogenetic switch and the production of protective extracellular matrix material [13]. The pathways that drive adherence and morphogenesis have been widely studied, and several signal transduction pathways as well as a highly interconnected network of transcription factors are known to regulate biofilm formation in C. albicans [13,14]. Recent studies have begun to address the pathways required for extracellular matrix biogenesis (i.e. making the matrix components) [15,16]. However, the regulatory aspects of matrix production are poorly defined, and only two gene expression regulators are known to control matrix accumulation in biofilms: the transcription factor Rlm1 is a positive regulator [17], while the transcription factor Zap1 is a negative regulator [18].
Transcriptomics and metabolomics analyses of biofilms have revealed that a critical difference between planktonic (suspension) growth and surface-attached biofilm growth relates to metabolic reprogramming. Glycolysis, ergosterol biosynthesis, the sulfur assimilation pathway, glycerol synthesis and respiratory metabolism are all modulated in biofilms [14,19–22]. Following from these studies, deletion of differentially expressed genes required for metabolic functions in biofilms has been found to impact on biofilm formation, underscoring the importance of metabolic reprogramming for the biofilm growth mode [23,24]. Relevant to our research interests, mitochondrial function and/or biogenesis are differentially regulated in biofilms [19]. These and other studies [25,26] are consistent with a role for mitochondrial reprogramming in biofilm formation. However, the important question of how metabolic changes are superimposed onto the developmental and structural changes that drive biofilm-dependent phenotypes remains poorly elucidated.
Although mitochondrial activity is clearly important for fungal virulence [27], very little is known about the regulatory networks that control mitochondrial biogenesis in C. albicans in an environmental and/or developmental context. Three transcription factors have been shown to have a role in mitochondrial respiratory activity in this pathogen [28], and the transcriptional regulatory complex Mediator modulates respiratory metabolism, although the gene targets are not known [25]. In addition to these transcriptional mechanisms, we have previously shown that posttranscriptional regulation through the major cytoplasmic mRNA deadenylase complex Ccr4-NOT has an impact on mitochondrial biogenesis in C. albicans in planktonic cultures [29].
We report here that a proportion of the mitochondria-related genes down-regulated in mature C. albicans biofilms [14] belong to an mRNA network of putative targets of the Pumilio RNA binding protein Puf3. We performed a detailed analysis of Puf3 function in the pathogen C. albicans, and our results suggest that posttranscriptional mRNA control of genes encoding the mitochondrial ribosome has been rewired between S. cerevisiae and C. albicans. We further show that posttranscriptional gene regulation is important for mitochondrial activity in biofilms, and demonstrate that that inactivation of the mRNA deadenylase CCR4 or uncoupling of mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation have consequences for biofilm structure and maturation, particularly the production of the extracellular matrix. While secretion of the extracellular matrix is a property of biofilm growth that has very important consequences for biofilm resistance to antifungal drugs (reviewed in [30]), and evasion of innate immunity [31], it is the least understood of the biofilm maturation processes. Our study illuminates a new mechanism of biofilm matrix regulation, leading us to propose a model for how environmental and nutritional changes in biofilms drive a critical biofilm protection mechanism.
Results
The C. albicans Puf3 regulon includes mRNAs encoding mitochondrial biogenesis genes differentially expressed in biofilms
Inspection of the Nobile et al data [14] revealed that of the 622 genes down-regulated in biofilms relative to growth in suspension, 162 are annotated to the GO term “Mitochondrion” (p = 1.40E-10, FDR≈0) (S1 Dataset and Fig 1A). Of these, based on inferred functions from homology to the model yeast S. cerevisiae, we judged that 29 genes are likely to have dominant functions in other organelles (S1 Dataset). For example, some of the genes encode glycolytic enzymes, enzymes of ergosterol biosynthesis in the endoplasmic reticulum, cytoplasmic ribosome subunits and translation factors, and proteins with nuclear roles (S1 Dataset). In several cases, their annotation to mitochondria is based on proteomics studies that found the proteins in the mitochondrial proteome [32,33]. However, caution has to be applied, particularly when abundant proteins, as well as structures associated with mitochondria, such as the endoplasmic reticulum and mitochondria-associated translation, are considered. Whether these proteins play a role in mitochondrial activity/biogenesis in C. albicans remains to be studied.
The remaining 133 genes were sorted based on their putative roles into two groups: “activity” (genes necessary for mitochondrial functions, such as metabolic enzymes) (68 genes) and “biogenesis” (genes necessary for building the organelle) (58 genes) (S1 Dataset; of note, 7 genes had unclear functions and were not assigned to either category). 36 of the 133 mitochondria-related genes, and about half of the “biogenesis” group (26/58) possess in their 3′ untranslated region (3′ UTR) a predicted binding site for the RNA binding protein Puf3 as defined in S. cerevisiae: (C/U/A)(A/G/C/U)UGUA(A/C/U)AUA (Fig 1A and S1 Dataset). Puf3 is a Pumilio family RNA binding protein which in S. cerevisiae controls mitochondrial biogenesis by impacting on the decay and subcellular localization to mitochondria of a network of mRNAs encoding mitochondrial proteins [34–37], reviewed in [38]. Our analysis therefore suggests for the first time that gene regulation in C. albicans biofilms, and more specifically mitochondrial biogenesis, might be regulated by posttranscriptional mechanisms.
The structure of the S. cerevisiae Puf3 RNA binding domain in complex with its cognate site from the COX17 3′ UTR has been solved [39]. Much like other PUF proteins, Puf3 uses the repeats that form the concave surface of its arc-shaped RNA binding domain to interact with the eight bases of the core RNA recognition motif. It discriminates its own targets from those bound by other yeast PUF family members by virtue of a binding pocket in repeat 8–8′ of the RNA binding domain that interacts with a 5′ cytosine at position -2 of the recognition element [39] (Fig 1B). Although a cytosine at -2 leads to high affinity binding [39], other nucleotides can be found at this position in Puf3 targets, as shown by the consensus sequence [34,35,40]. Primary sequence alignment showed conservation of the -2 cytosine-binding motif in repeat 8′ of the PUM domain of C. albicans Puf3 (encoded by C4_05370W or orf19.1795). (Fig 1C). This suggests that C. albicans Puf3 recognizes the same motif as its S. cerevisiae homolog.
To better define the Puf3-regulon in C. albicans, we performed a bioinformatics search for the (C/U/A)(A/G/C/U)UGUA(A/C/U)AUA recognition element in 3′ UTRs genome-wide. Firstly, we precisely defined the landscape of 3′ UTRs across the C. albicans transcriptome with a new 3′ sequencing technology that we developed called PAT-seq [41]. The 3' UTRs were called based on the most highly expressed peak within 400 bases of the end of the coding sequence, and not lying within a following gene on the same strand. Previous RNA-seq data has been informative in determining 3′ UTRs of C. albicans transcripts [42], and our mapping correlates well with the study of Bruno et al (Fig 2A). The apparent extension in length of 3′ UTRs in the Bruno et al data [42] is due to alternative adenylation that is present at lower abundance than the major peak called by our approach. The distinction between alternative 3′ UTR length isoforms is not easily extracted from regular RNA-seq, but is sensitively detected by PAT-seq. Moreover, with our technology we mapped 4862 3′ UTRs (or 78% of the transcriptome), and could map an additional 2006 3′ UTRs, beyond the annotations published by Bruno et al (S2 Dataset). Files to display 3′ UTR positions (including alternate isoforms where they exist) in CGD gbrowse are available (see Materials and Methods). We performed an equivalent analysis in S. cerevisiae, where we could map 5402 3′ UTRs. Comparison of positions of adenylation with S. cerevisiae showed that in C. albicans 3′ UTRs are overall shorter. The offset between convergent and overlapping 3′ UTRs is also slightly shorter, with both of these features reflecting a higher level of compaction of the C. albicans genome (Fig 2B). Despite this global similarity between 3′ UTR length distributions, the absolute 3′ UTR length in orthologous genes is not conserved between the two species (Fig 2C). Analysis of gene ontology enrichment (GO Function) in the C. albicans dataset, in windows of 50 bases of 3′ UTR length and at p < 0.0001, identified enrichment of very broad GO terms, such as “binding”, “anion binding”, “ATP binding”, “transferase activity”, “pyrophosphatase activity”, with one exception being “structural constituent of the ribosome” in the 50–99 bases 3′ UTR length group (S3 Dataset). An equivalent analysis of the S. cerevisiae dataset similarly showed broad terms, with the exception being “electron carrier activity” that mapped to 3′ UTRs longer than 200 bases (S3 Dataset). To further address if there is conservation of 3′ UTR lengths between the two yeasts related to gene function, we mapped genes with mitochondrial functions in Fig 2C (shown as red dots). However, no correlation was seen in regards to 3′ UTR lengths for mitochondria-related transcript between the two yeast species.
Armed with the 3′ UTR landscape for the C. albicans transcriptome, we identified a total of 555 putative Puf3 targets (S2 Dataset). For comparative purposes, we searched the S. cerevisiae genome in an equivalent manner and identified 671 genes with Puf3 binding sites in their 3′ UTR (S2 Dataset). In 3′ UTRs, the Puf3 motif occurs two or three times as often as random motifs of the same composition. However in the genomes as a whole Puf3-binding sequences are not more prevalent than random motifs of the same composition (2751 instances in S. cerevisiae, and 3463 instances in C. albicans). Of the 555 putative Puf3 targets in C. albicans, 432 (77.8%) have an ortholog in S. cerevisiae (S2 Dataset, Fig 3A). The number of genes where both species have the Puf3 motif is 198 (Fig 3A). This correlation is highly significant by Fisher’s Exact Test, as similar analysis with a random shuffling of the motif generally produces a value less than 3 in common. Therefore, the Puf3 motif is much more highly conserved than shuffled motifs. The 3′ UTR length of the shared mRNAs with the Puf3 motif is not conserved (S1 Fig, red dots). Furthermore, the position of the Puf3 binding site is not preserved relative to the stop codon or the polyadenylation site between the two species (Fig 2D and 2E).
Within the predicted Puf3 targets in C. albicans 268 genes or 48.3% are assigned to the GO term “Mitochondrion” (p = 6.12e-141, FDR≈0) (S4 Dataset). With the same logic as described in the analysis of the biofilm-related genes, we judged that 12 of these genes encode proteins with predominant roles in another subcellular location. These are indicated in S4 Dataset, but for ease of comparison of the conserved and divergent putative Puf3 targets between C. albicans and S. cerevisiae, all analyses were performed with the 268-gene set. Inspection of the 198 conserved putative Puf3 targets between these two yeasts revealed that 177 belong to GO Mitochondrion (p = 126e-121, FDR≈0, S2 Dataset). In other words, the vast majority of the 198 conserved putative Puf3 targets belong to the mitochondrial network, and there is little conservation outside of that (Fig 3A). Cytosine at -2 is dominantly found in both C. albicans (115/198) and S. cerevisiae (127/198), however less than half (84/198 mRNAs or ≈ 42.4%) have a -2 C in both species (S2 Dataset). The vast majority of genes in the C. albicans Puf3-dependent mitochondrial network encode functions required for organelle biogenesis, rather than metabolic functions, including almost the entire set of proteins that constitute the mitochondrial ribosome (Fig 3B and S4 Dataset). Our results are consistent with a previous bioinformatic analysis that led to the proposition that Puf3 is an important regulator of mitochondrial biogenesis in the Saccharomycotina group of fungi [43].
In C. albicans, Puf3 regulates mitochondrial biogenesis during growth in both glucose and the physiologically relevant carbon source lactate
Unlike the S. cerevisiae puf3Δ mutant, which shows reduced growth on non-fermentable carbon sources [34,43], the C. albicans homozygous deletion mutant puf3Δ/Δ was able to grow as well as the wild type strain in all carbon sources tested: glucose, glycerol and lactate (Fig 3C). Moreover, the mutant did not display any observable changes in mitochondrial morphology (Fig 3D). However, a mitochondrial role for Puf3 in C. albicans was revealed under mitochondrial stress. The mutant was hypersensitive to carbonyl cyanide m-chlorophenylhydrazone (CCCP), which uncouples electron transport through the respiratory chain from ATP synthesis (Fig 3E). This phenotype was complemented by re-introduction of the wild type PUF3 gene into the mutant genome (Fig 3E).
PUF proteins negatively impact on mRNA stability by recruiting deadenylases such as Ccr4, which digest the poly(A) tail and initiate decay, reviewed in [38]. Therefore, we next tested mRNA half-lives in the absence of Puf3 in C. albicans. Attempts to use the transcriptional inhibitor 1,10 phenantroline in C. albicans failed (no repression of gene transcription was observed for a prolonged time, S2A Fig). Another transcriptional inhibitor, thiolutin, was effective in inhibiting transcription only at very high doses, and had a stabilizing effect on mRNA (S2B and S2C Fig). To circumvent these technical problems with transcriptional inhibitors, we placed two Puf3 targets, MRPL25 encoding a mitochondrial ribosomal subunit, and COX23 encoding a cytochrome c oxidase assembly factor, under the repressible MET3 promoter. In this set up, transcription is “on” in the absence of methionine and cysteine in the medium, whereas addition of methionine and cysteine results in rapid repression. In these strains, only one copy of the Puf3-dependent gene is placed under the MET3 promoter, and therefore primers were used to specifically detect this copy and not the endogenous gene (Fig 4A). This strategy was chosen over deleting the second copy because of the high impact of mitochondrial mutations on C. albicans fitness due to its petite negative nature [44]. Control experiments showed that the detection of the MET3p-controlled transcripts of MRPL25 and COX23 by quantitative PCR experiments was highly specific (S3 Fig), and these strains had no observable growth defects in any of the carbon sources tested (S4 Fig).
To address how Puf3 impacts on the stability of its putative mRNA targets, the experiment was performed as follows: the gene was repressed initially, then transcription was induced for 10 minutes, followed by repression and monitoring of the decay of the newly synthesized mRNA (see Materials and Methods). The experiments were done in glucose, and in the non-fermentable carbon source lactate, which is physiologically important for C. albicans in human host niches [7]. The half-lives of these transcripts in wild type cells were not affected by carbon source, as in both glucose and lactate the mRNAs were rapidly decayed with similar kinetics (Fig 4B and 4C). During growth in either glucose or lactate, deletion of PUF3 resulted in slower decay of the MRPL25 and COX23 transcripts (Fig 4B and 4C). We demonstrate that the effect of PUF3 is direct by showing that mutations of the Puf3 binding site in the 3′ UTR of COX23 (in the core element or a -2 cytosine to alanine mutation), phenocopied the deletion of PUF3 in otherwise wild type strains (Fig 4D). The result with the -2C to A mutation is consistent with an important function of -2C for Puf3 binding in C. albicans.
Our results were somewhat surprising in light of previous publications in S. cerevisiae that showed that: a) transcripts encoding mitochondrial proteins are stabilized during growth of a wild type strain in non-fermentable carbon sources compared to growth in glucose, and b) Puf3 represses mRNA stability only in glucose, but not in non-fermentable carbon sources [36,45]. While previous studies in S. cerevisiae used several non-fermentable carbon sources, lactate was not directly tested. To test the effects of lactate in S. cerevisiae, we made use of a strain that carries an RNA polymerase II temperature sensitive mutation (rpb1-1) which allows for repression of transcription at 37°C (wild type and puf3 mutant, described in [36]). Similarly to C. albicans, in S. cerevisiae deletion of PUF3 had a stabilizing effect in both glucose and lactate on two transcripts that encode cytochrome c oxidase assembly factors: COX17 and COX23 (Fig 5). Moreover, in wild type cells the half-life was similar for these two transcripts in glucose and lactate media (compare Fig 5A and 5B). The situation with the mRNA encoding the mitochondrial ribosomal subunit MRPL25 was different. Firstly, unlike in C. albicans, in S. cerevisiae the MRPL25 transcript was stabilized in lactate compared to glucose in wild type cells (compare Fig 5A and 5B). Secondly, while deletion of PUF3 had a stabilizing effect in glucose (albeit less pronounced than what is seen in C. albicans), in lactate the half-life for MRPL25 was the same in wild type and puf3Δ mutant cells (Fig 5A and 5B). For two other transcripts encoding mitochondrial ribosomal proteins, MRP21 and MRPL11, in wild type cells mRNAs decay was also fast in glucose media and slower in lactate, although stabilization in lactate was less pronounced than what was observed for MRPL25 (Fig 5A and 5B, bottom two graphs). Deletion of PUF3 resulted in stabilization of MRP21 and MRPL11 in glucose (Fig 5A), and also some stabilization, particularly for MRPL11, was observable in lactate (Fig 5B). As controls, we assayed three transcripts with mitochondrial functions, which do not contain Puf3 binding sites in the 3′ UTR: MMF1, FUM1 and OAC1. Deletion of PUF3 had no effect on the decay of these three transcripts in either glucose or lactate (S5 Fig). Therefore, mRNAs that do not contain a Puf3 binding motif do not respond to deletion of PUF3, suggesting that the observed stabilization of the COX and MRP genes in the puf3Δ mutant is specific.
In S. cerevisiae cells grown in lactate the decay of all tested transcripts (Puf3-dependent and Puf3-independent) was altered compared to glucose. Moreover, it appeared that, after initial decay, a subpopulation of the transcripts remained stable over the course of the experiment (see Fig 5). This was not observed in C. albicans (Fig 4). Unlike in C. albicans, in S. cerevisiae transcription was inhibited by a shift to 37°C, and we wondered whether the combination of lactate media plus the temperature shift might be contributing to the nature of the decay. To test this, we repeated the experiment with the MET3p-MRPL25 strains of C. albicans in lactate, but shifting the strains to 37°C concomitant with addition of methionine and cysteine to the media to repress transcription. Indeed, in these conditions in C. albicans also we observed fast initial decay and a subpopulation of transcripts that remained stable over the course of the experiment (Fig 4E). This result indicates that the combination of lactate and temperature shift results in altered mRNA decay for a subpopulation of transcripts. Importantly, consistent with what was observed when the experiment was done at room temperature, and in contrast to the result from S. cerevisiae, in C. albicans the half life of MRPL25 in the wild type remained very short in lactate at 37°C, and clear stabilization was seen in the puf3Δ/Δ mutant (Fig 4E).
A possible explanation for the altered decay curves observed in lactate at 37°C is the presence of two sub-populations of mRNAs: one that is decayed faster and one that is decayed slower through the use of alternative polyadenylation sites. This would be carbon-source dependent, as it is only seen in lactate and not in glucose (Fig 5). To test this, we used extension poly-A test (ePAT) [46] on three transcripts in S. cerevisiae, COX17, and two other mRNAs that encode mitochondrial proteins: TOM70, which contains a Puf3 binding site in its 3′ UTR and OM14, which does not. No alternative 3′ UTRs were observed for COX17 in glucose or lactate media, arguing against the use of alternative polyadenylation sites in this transcript dependent on carbon source (S6 Fig). However, both TOM70 and OM14 revealed a transcript with a shorter 3′ UTR that was stabilized in lactate media (S6 Fig). Collectively, these results show that the use of polyadenylation sites can be influenced by carbon source, but not necessarily in relation to Puf3 function.
Posttranscriptional gene regulation impacts on the development of C. albicans biofilms
As shown in Fig 1, a proportion of the genes that contain a Puf3 binding site is differentially expressed in C. albicans biofilms. Therefore, we next investigated the roles of posttranscriptional gene regulation in biofilm formation. In addition to Puf3 (this study), we have previously shown that the Ccr4 mRNA deadenylase is involved in mitochondrial function in C. albicans [29]. Puf3 and Ccr4 are functionally linked. Puf3, like other PUF proteins, can bind to the Ccr4-NOT complex [47], which is thought to be the mechanism by which Ccr4 is recruited to PUF-dependent mRNAs for poly(A) tail deadenylation and decay, reviewed in [38]. Consistent with a role for these posttranscriptional regulators in biofilm gene expression, deletion of either PUF3 or CCR4 resulted in differential expression of mitochondria-related genes in C. albicans biofilms (Fig 6A). CCR4 had a more pronounced effect than PUF3, as would be expected for a major mRNA deadenylase that is recruited to transcripts by multiple RNA binding proteins. Control genes that do not contain a Puf3 binding site in the 3′ UTR (POR1, MDM12, MDM10) were not up-regulated in the puf3Δ/Δ mutant (Fig 6A and S7 Fig), although POR1 was significantly up-regulated in the ccr4Δ/Δ mutant in line with a broader role for Ccr4 in gene expression (Fig 6A and S7 Fig). The levels of HWP1 and TEF1, which are not related to mitochondria, were not up-regulated in either mutant (S7 Fig), arguing against non-specific higher levels of mRNAs due to lack of a major mRNA decay pathway.
Consistent with milder effects on gene regulation, and suggestive of compensatory effects, the puf3Δ/Δ mutant formed biofilms of wild type structure (S8 Fig). However, analysis of the ccr4Δ/Δ mutant revealed a clear role of posttranscriptional gene regulation in C. albicans biofilms. The biofilms formed by ccr4Δ/Δ showed altered structure in scanning electron micrographs, with an increase in yeast cells over filamentous cells and hyper-production of biofilm extracellular matrix material (Fig 6B). The effect on hyper-production of extracellular matrix was observed in several biofilm growth media (RPMI, Spider and YNB) (Fig 6B and S9 Fig), regardless of whether the mutant biofilm showed somewhat increased or decreased biomass (in Spider and RPMI respectively, Fig 6C). Therefore, the changes to biofilm extracellular matrix of the ccr4Δ/Δ mutant are unlikely to be caused by changes in growth rates and final biomass. Consistent with mitochondrial dysfunction, ccr4Δ/Δ mutant biofilms returned very low levels of respiratory activity using the XTT-reduction assay, which depends on mitochondrial respiration (Fig 6D). Similar biofilm phenotypes were displayed by pop2Δ/Δ, which is inactivated in the POP2 subunit of Ccr4-NOT that is also essential for mRNA deadenylase activity (Fig 6B and S9 Fig). Quantification of extracted extracellular matrix relative to total biofilm biomass showed a ~2 fold increase in ccr4Δ/Δ mutant compared to wild type (Fig 7A), and the ccr4Δ/Δ biofilm was less sensitive to treatment with zymolyase preparations (Fig 7B). Zymolyase preparations contain 1,3 ß-glucanase, mannanase, protease and endochitinase activities [48] and are therefore likely to act on several components of the extracellular matrix [49]. Enzymatic activities that impact on glucan synthesis and remodeling have a major impact on biofilm matrix levels [15,16], and our previous work showed that in the absence of CCR4 the relative levels of glucan in the cell wall are reduced [29]. Consistent with this, the level of matrix 1,3 ß-glucan as determined by the Glucantell kit was not higher in ccr4Δ/Δ biofilms (Fig 7C). Furthermore, genes encoding enzymes required for glucan synthesis and remodeling, including BGL2, XOG1 and PHR1 that have roles in 1,3 ß-glucan accumulation in the biofilm matrix [15], were not significantly up-regulated in ccr4Δ/Δ mutant biofilms (Fig 7D; we note that a trend toward higher levels of BGL2 was observed). We further assayed five genes that regulate the level of mannan in the biofilm extracellular matrix [16]. Of these, three (ALG11, MNN9 and VRG4) displayed significantly higher expression levels in ccr4Δ/Δ biofilms (Fig 7D), suggesting that the activity of Ccr4 impacts on the expression of enzymatic activities that control biofilm matrix production.
Mitochondrial activity in the development of C. albicans biofilms
One of the main stresses experienced by biofilm cells is hypoxia [50,51], and Ccr4 has been recently implicated in the response of C. albicans to hypoxia [52]. We therefore hypothesized that, additional to regulation of factors with roles in matrix carbohydrate accumulation, changes to mitochondrial activity in ccr4Δ/Δ biofilms, and potentially hypoxic adaptation might be responsible for the observed biofilm phenotypes of the mutant. Treatment with CCCP, which uncouples mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation, mimics the early effects of hypoxia on the level of the genome-wide transcriptional response [52]. Therefore, we analyzed the structural features of biofilms in the presence of CCCP. For these experiments we predominantly used RPMI medium, because it supported biofilm growth significantly better than Spider medium upon mitochondrial inhibition. The dose of 20 μM CCCP is in line with previous studies in S. cerevisiae [53], and was effective in causing mitochondrial stress: similarly to ccr4Δ/Δ biofilms, treatment with CCCP led to up-regulation of mRNAs with mitochondrial functions (Fig 8A), which is a known consequence of mitochondrial perturbation [29,54]. CCCP had an effect on biofilm growth (S10 Fig), but nevertheless a complex biofilm that structurally resembled the wild type formed (Fig 8B). Similar to deletion of CCR4, treatment of biofilms with CCCP led to the accumulation of extracellular matrix (Fig 8B), and somewhat greater stability upon treatment with zymolyase (Fig 8C). These results support the proposition that mitochondrial dysfunction triggers ECM accumulation in biofilms.
Discussion
Regulatory networks orchestrated by transcription factors have been widely studied in fungal species and metazoans, from the perspective of pathway regulation as well as evolutionary conservation and/or rewiring. An example relevant to our study is the report of Nobile et al of a highly interconnected network of transcription factors that regulate biofilm development in C. albicans [14]. We show here that, beyond transcriptional control, posttranscriptional gene regulation impacts on biofilm formation in C. albicans. Our data suggest that the mechanism involves regulation of mitochondrial function, as well as control over the expression of cell wall genes that are involved in biofilm matrix production. We provide the first functional data supporting regulatory rewiring of posttranscriptional mechanisms that mediate mRNA stability between S. cerevisiae and C. albicans. We further describe a novel function for the Ccr4 mRNA deadenylase and mitochondrial metabolism in a key biofilm protection mechanism: the accumulation of the extracellular matrix.
Insight into the 3′ UTR landscape and posttranscriptional regulation in C. albicans
Following transcription, mRNAs can be organized into co-regulated networks termed “posttranscriptional operons”, through sharing of recognition elements bound by RNA binding proteins [55,56]. Compared to transcription, little is known about the function and evolution of posttranscriptional mRNA networks in either model or pathogenic fungi. We performed 3′-based RNA-seq that allowed us to map precisely 3′ UTRs on 4862 C. albicans transcripts, 1/3 of the transcriptome more than what has been previously defined [42]. We found no general conservation of 3′ UTR lengths between S. cerevisiae and C. albicans mRNAs. Also, while the regulation of the functional network of mitochondria-related mRNAs by Puf3 is conserved between S. cerevisiae and C. albicans (this study and [43]), we show that the location of the Puf3 binding site relative to the stop codon or polyadenylation site is not conserved, arguing that these features might not be critical for Puf3-dependent regulation. This could mean a difference with another related PUF protein, Puf5 in S. cerevisiae, for which the position of the binding motif relative to the termination codon impacts on repression [57]. As in S. cerevisiae, in C. albicans cytosine at position -2 in the recognition element is prevalent in the mitochondria-related putative Puf3 targets, and our data shows that -2C is important for repression of COX23 (Fig 4E). However, our analysis shows that the -2C is conserved in only about 50% of the mRNAs that contain a Puf3 recognition motif in both yeasts, suggesting it might not be as critical for Puf3-dependent regulation.
Our data sheds light on the regulatory rewiring of gene expression in fungi. This has mostly been studied at the level of gene transcription, and information on the evolution of posttranscriptional mechanisms is scarce. Bioinformatic studies of the distribution of Puf3 and Puf4 binding motifs have suggested that their roles might have changed during fungal evolution [43,58]. However, biological insight into the regulation and relevance for organismal biology of these posttranscriptional networks in distinct species is lacking. A major functional group containing Puf3 binding sites is the mitochondrial ribosomal genes. In an elegant example of evolutionary change, genes encoding mitochondrial ribosomal proteins have been transcriptionally rewired between the Crabtree positive S. cerevisiae and the Crabtree negative C. albicans by loss of a promoter element in S. cerevisiae that enabled the uncoupling of the regulation of the cytoplasmic ribosome and rRNA biogenesis genes from that of the mitochondrial ribosome [59]. Our data shows differences in the regulation of mRNA stability of the mitochondrial ribosomal subunit MRPL25 between C. albicans and S. cerevisiae, suggesting that mitochondrial ribosomal gene expression has been rewired at multiple levels of control during fungal evolution. In glucose, MRPL25 was rapidly decayed in both yeasts. In lactate the decay of MRPL25 remained rapid in C. albicans, but it was slower in S. cerevisiae (Figs 4 and 5). Moreover, in C. albicans deletion of PUF3 caused stabilization of MRPL25 in both glucose and lactate, whereas in S. cerevisiae this was seen only in glucose. We could show that these differences in posttranscriptional regulation of MRPL25 by carbon source and Puf3 were not due to the use of a temperature shift to stop transcription in S. cerevisiae, as rapid decay and the effect of the puf3 mutation were maintained in C. albicans when the experiment included a temperature shift. We further considered the possibility that transcriptional up-regulation of MRPL25 in lactate media has caused a stoichiometry problem for the decay machinery in S. cerevisiae, thereby non-specifically slowing decay (of note, in C. albicans the gene is regulated by the MET3 promoter and so it is dissociated from regulation by carbon source). However, we do not believe this to be the case: firstly, the induction of the COX genes and the MRPL25 gene in lactate versus glucose was uniform for all three genes and MRPL25 was induced the least (≈7 fold for COX17, ≈5 fold for COX23 and ≈4.3 fold for MRPL25); yet only for MRPL25 we observed a change towards a longer half-life in lactate. Secondly, comparing transcript levels normalized to the loading control gene SCR1 in C. albicans and in S. cerevisiae at the time of transcriptional repression (time point 0) showed similar relative levels in lactate media, and yet only in S. cerevisiae stabilization was observed. Different mitochondrial ribosomal subunit genes might be impacted to a different degree by carbon source and Puf3-dependent regulation: compared to MRPL25, a smaller effect of carbon source on the half life was observed for MRP21 and MRPL11, and the transcripts were stabilized in the puf3Δ mutant in glucose, and a smaller effect was seen in lactate. Collectively our data suggest that the differences in mRNA stability control for the mitochondrial ribosomal subunits between S. cerevisiae and C. albicans reflect regulatory rewiring to enable fine-tuning of mitochondrial biogenesis with metabolic status and cellular energy requirements. Data with MRPL25 suggest that this regulatory difference might be in part due to distinct control by carbon source over Puf3 activity in the two fungal species.
Ccr4 and mitochondrial activity are new regulators of biofilm maturation and extracellular matrix production
A proportion of the mitochondria-related genes differentially expressed in C. albicans biofilms belongs to the Puf3-regulon (S1 Dataset and Fig 1A). A role for posttranscriptional gene regulation in biofilm maturation was revealed here by studying the consequences of inactivation of the main mRNA deadenylase CCR4, which mediates Puf3-dependent repression and has a dominant role in regulating mitochondrial activity in biofilms. While inactivation of both CCR4 and PUF3 results in higher levels of mitochondria-related genes, both of these factors have a positive role in mitochondrial biogenesis (this study and [29]). As we have proposed, this could reflect the roles of mRNA targeting to mitochondria for localized translation, and translational inhibition at the mitochondrial surface to assist co-translational protein import into mitochondria [38]. Drastic structural alterations were observed in ccr4Δ/Δ biofilms, with morphogenetic change towards more yeast-form cells (consistent with a role of Ccr4 in hyphal differentiation [29]), over-production of extracellular matrix and higher biofilm resistance to degrading enzymes. To our knowledge, Ccr4 is only the third gene expression regulator of biofilm matrix production in C. albicans, and the second negative regulator, the other one being the zinc-responsive transcription factor Zap1 [18]. Biofilms made by the zap1 mutant resemble those made by the ccr4 mutant in several aspects: they display hyper-production of extracellular matrix (although the precise components of the matrix regulated by these two factors differ), and there are more yeast-form cells compared to the hyphae-rich wild type biofilms [18]. Our study therefore adds a key posttranscriptional gene expression regulator as an important factor determining biofilm maturation.
To date, almost all of the genes known to affect C. albicans biofilm matrix relate functionally to cell wall integrity, reflecting the fact that cell wall carbohydrates β-glucans and mannans are important components of the matrix material [49]. In the case of Zap1, effects on the expression of glucan hydrolyases and metabolism/quorum sensing via expression of alcohol dehydrogenases have been suggested to play a role in matrix regulation [18]. In contrast to Zap1, Ccr4 does not regulate the levels of matrix 1,3 β-glucan, but instead several genes required for the accumulation of matrix mannan [16] were expressed at higher levels in biofilms of the ccr4Δ/Δ mutant. Given the prominent role of Ccr4 in both mitochondrial activity and cell wall integrity [29], and a link between mitochondrial function and the cell wall in C. albicans and other fungi [27], we further considered that modulation of mitochondrial function in biofilms due to hypoxia could be sensed as a stress signal, and direct the production of the protective extracellular matrix. Consistent with this idea, uncoupling of oxidative phosphorylation by CCCP, which mimics hypoxia [52], caused hyper-production of extracellular material in biofilms and higher biofilm stability towards degrading enzymes. Ccr4, while not absolutely required for the cells to execute a transcriptional response to hypoxia, had nevertheless a significant effect on a subset of genes regulated by hypoxia [52]. Our data indicates that post-transcriptional regulation of gene expression by Ccr4 might serve to adjust biofilm metabolism and maturation in response to the harsh hypoxic environment, by impacting on mitochondrial activity and on the expression of cell wall and matrix related genes. Consistent with this proposition, Sellam et al have shown that Ccr4 has a role in cell wall gene expression in hypoxia [52].
Based on the data presented here, we propose a model in which metabolic and mitochondrial reprogramming in biofilms drive the pathways of biofilm maturation (Fig 9). In this model, changes to mitochondrial activity and biogenesis in the biofilm environment, possibly due to hypoxia, constitute the signal that triggers activation of protective mechanisms. This ultimately leads to extracellular matrix accumulation, potentially through the cross-talk between mitochondrial function and the pathways of cell wall biogenesis and overall cell stability (reviewed in [27]). Ccr4 is involved in the response to hypoxia, and it orchestrates biofilm maturation by adjusting the expression of cell wall genes with roles in matrix production, as well as by regulating mitochondrial biogenesis and activity. In conclusion, we suggest that the interface between metabolic and developmental restructuring in biofilms has important consequences for matrix production, a phenotype that is implicated in both antifungal and immune resistance of the biofilm growth mode. This should be considered in the context of antifungal strategies that target metabolic regulators.
Materials and Methods
Fungal strains and growth conditions
The open reading frame (ORF) encoding the C. albicans Puf3 (orf19.1795, C4_05370W) was deleted in the BWP17 strain background, using URA3 and ARG4 as selection markers. The complemented strain was made by cloning the PUF3 ORF plus promoter and terminator regions into the plasmid pDDB78, and this plasmid was integrated into the mutant genome by directing it to the HIS1 locus. We noticed that the sequence of PUF3 in the BWP17 strain background somewhat differs from the sequence in the Candida Genome Database. There are deletions of 6 nucleotides at two positions: 1265–1270 and 1593–1598 in 2790 nucleotide long PUF3 ORF. This affects two repeats: two amino acids P and G are removed from a 4 PG repeat (i.e. leaving 3 PG repeats: PGPGPG), and NN in a 9 N repeat, thereby converting it to a 7 N repeat (NNNNNNN). These two deletions are outside of the PUM domain and do not affect Puf3 function, as shown by complementation of mutant phenotype in Fig 3.
To generate Candida MET3p repressible strains, one allele of COX23 and MRPL25 were placed under the control of the MET3 gene promoter by genomic integration via homologous recombination of the HIS1-MET3p cassette amplified from the template pFA–HIS1–MET3p plasmid provided by Jürgen Wendland [60]. To generate strains containing mutant forms of the Puf3-binding sites in the 3′ UTR of COX23, we first synthesized the whole 2238 bp long cassettes of MET3p-COX23 ORF containing wild type, core and—C mutant 3′ UTR (GenScript) and cloned these cassettes in pDDB78 plasmid and integrated them into the HIS1 locus of wild type strain of BWP17 background. All primers used for strain construction are listed in S1 Table. The C. albicans ccr4 and pop2 mutant strains were described in [29]. For most experiments the wild type control was strain DAY185, which is a fully prototrophic strain derived from BWP17 by re-integration of the URA3, ARG4 and HIS1 markers. The S. cerevisiae puf3Δ strain in the rpb1-1 background and the corresponding control strain were gifts from Wendy Olivas and are described in [36].
Generally, strains were grown in YPD (1% yeast extract, 2% peptone, 2% glucose) medium, supplemented with 80 μg/ml of uridine for C. albicans. Standard growth temperature was 30°C. For analysis of sensitivity of puf3Δ/Δ on different carbon source, ten-fold serially diluted cultures of all strains, were spotted on YP plates containing 2% glucose (YPD), 3% glycerol (YPG) or 3% lactate (YPL) and photographed after 2 days of growth. For sensitivity to CCCP, ten-fold serial dilutions of cultures of wild type and mutant strain were spotted on YPG plates with or without CCCP at the concentrations indicated in Fig 3.
For mRNA decay experiments of Candida strains (Fig 4), wild type and puf3Δ/Δ strains were first grown overnight and then diluted to OD600 = 0.1 and grown further for 4–5 hours in non-inducing YPD or YPL medium at 30°C. To induce expression from MET3p, the cultures were washed once with PBS and transferred into synthetic medium lacking methionine and cysteine followed by incubation for 10 min at 30°C. After incubation, the time = 0 min sample was collected, then methionine and cysteine were added to the remaining cultures to repress transcription from MET3p (2.5 mM methionine and 1mM cysteine). Samples were collected at indicated time points, flash frozen on dry ice and stored in -80°C until ready for RNA isolation. The experiment was performed 3–4 independent times, assaying one wild type and one mutant culture each time. The experiments with the mutated Puf3 binding site in the COX23 3′ UTR were performed twice independently.
For decay experiment of S. cerevisiae strains (Fig 5), wild type and puf3Δ mutant were grown overnight in YPD or YPL medium at 24°C and next day cultures were diluted and grown for few hours until log phase (OD600 ~ 0.8). To repress transcription, cultures were quickly centrifuged, and then transferred to medium preheated to 37°C. Samples were collected at indicated time points, flash frozen on dry ice and stored in -80°C prior to RNA isolation.
For gene expression analysis in C. albicans biofilms (Figs 6A, 7D and 8A), biofilms were grown in 6 well microtiter plates in Spider medium for 48 hours in a 37°C incubator with shaking at 75 rpm. Cell pellets were harvested and stored at -80°C until use. RPMI 1640 buffered with MOPS (RPMI-MOPS, pH = 7.2, for a detailed formula refer to CLSI guideline M27-A3) and Spider medium (1% nutrient broth, 1% D-mannitol, 2 g K2HPO4, pH = 7.2) were used for C. albicans biofilm growth. Biofilm growth in YNB media was performed essentially as described [61].
Mitochondrial morphology in Fig 3D was analyzed by staining log-phase cultures of the indicated C. albicans strains with 1 μM MitoTracker Red CMXRos (Life Technologies, M7512) for 30 min in the dark at 30°C. Cells were washed with fresh medium, mounted on glass slides and observed with an Olympus BX60 fluorescence microscope. Images were taken with a 100x objective and analyzed using Spot Advanced Software (http://www.spotimaging.com/software/).
Quantitative PCR analysis of mRNA decay and steady state mRNA levels
For quantitative PCR (qPCR) analysis of all samples, total RNAs were extracted using the hot-phenol method followed by DNase I (Ambion) treatment to remove contaminating genomic DNA. Reverse transcription reaction was performed with Superscript III (Invitrogen) using 800 ng of total RNA and 200 ng of mammalian RNA as a “spike-in” control. qPCR was performed using the Fast-Start universal SYBR Green Master (Roche) on the LightCycler 480 (Roche). The expression levels of the transcripts were normalized to the level of the SCR1 gene transcribed by RNA polymerase III. Analysis of qPCR data was performed using LinReg [62,63]. The primers used for qPCR analysis are listed in S2 Table.
ePAT assays
The ePAT assays were performed using RNA extracted from S. cerevisiae cultures grown in either glucose or lactate as the carbon source. The assay was performed as described in [46]. Primers are shown in S2 Table.
Biofilm quantitative assays
Biofilm formation of C. albicans wild type and mutant strains was quantitatively assessed by crystal violet staining, as described in our previous study [64]. The growth medium was Spider or RPMI in 96-well microplates at 37°C. Following 90 min adhesion and washing of non-adherent cells, biofilms were grown for 48 h, with fresh medium added at 24 h. Negative control were wells contained medium-only. Alternatively, C. albicans biofilms were grown in 6 well plates under the same conditions and total biofilm biomass from three wells for each strain was determined by dry weight measurement. For the XTT reduction assay in Fig 6D, biofilms were grown in RPMI-MOPS for 48 h in 96-well plates, XTT added at 0.5 mg/ml, and reading made at OD492 following incubation in the dark for 2 h.
Biofilm qualitative assay
Scanning electron microscopy was used for biofilm qualitative studies essentially as previously described [64]. Biofilms were formed on serum-coated silicone disks and grown for 48 h at 37°C with shaking at 75 rpm. Samples were viewed under a Hitachi S570 scanning electron microscope.
Zymolyase sensitivity assays
Biofilms were grown with RPMI-MOPS in 96 well plates for 24 hours, and zymolyase assays performed essentially as described [15], with the exception that crystal violet staining was used for quantification. Zymolyase–20T, MP Biomedicals was used.
Quantitative analysis of C. albicans biofilm matrix
Individual C. albicans biofilm components, including biofilm cells and extracellular polymer matrix (ECM), were isolated from 48 h mature biofilms grown in Spider medium, following the method by Taff et al [15]. Total ECM was then extracted and quantified relative to total biofilm consisting of cells and extracellular material using a method modified from McCourtie and Douglas [65]. β-1,3 glucan in the biofilm ECM was determined quantitatively using the Glucatell Endpoint Kit (DKSH).
Statistical analysis
Statistical analysis was performed on the biological repeats. Where multiple technical repeats were performed for a given biological repeat, the values of the technical repeats were averaged to give the data point for that particular biological sample. Statistical significance was calculated in GraphPad Prism using the Student’s t-test.
RNA seq and bioinformatics analysis
The PAT-seq data utilized for 3′ analysis here is available in the NCBI Short Read Archive (accession number SRP056994). The tracks suitable for upload of all adenylation-sites we identified in the C. albicans transcriptome into gbrowse (CGD) the follow steps can be taken: 1) open gbrowse and set genome data source to A21 assembly; 2) go to ‘select custom tracks’; 3) copy and paste the web link within verma-gaur et al., PAS-5.wig; 4) go back to browser and click on the little spanner symbol to change the track-height to 80. Note, use the down cursor rather than mouse; 5) Do the same for forward and reverse tracks. The S. cerevisiae data is drawn from [41], and is available from GEO accession GSE53461 and for interactive viewing at http://rnasystems.erc.monash.edu/.
For PAT-seq the C. albicans strain was grown in YPD+Uridine to mid log phase at 30°C, and the PAT-seq experiment was performed exactly as previously described [41], except that a template oligonucleotide compatible with SOLiD sequencing [/5BioTEG/CTGCTGTACGGCCAAGGCGTTTTTTTTTTTT] was used to append the 3’ tag, and SOLiD compatible 5’ linkers were ligated to the 5’ end. PAT-seq cDNA was input into 16 cycles of amplification with a SOLiD universal sequencing primer [CCACTACGCCTCCGCTTTCCTCTCTATGGGCAGTCGGAGAT] and SOLiD Barcoding primers (Life Technologies). PAT-seq libraries were sequenced on a SOLiD 5500xl instrument according to the manufacturer’s instructions at the Gandel Charitable Trust Sequencing Centre (Monash University). The data were mapped to the reference genome: C. albicans SC5314 assembly 21; using the tail-tools pipeline version 0.31 and nesoni version 0.117) http://rnasystems.erc.monash.edu/. Figures were generated in R and Illustrator. The Venn diagram in Fig 3 was generated using US DOE Venn Diagram Plotter software (http://omics.pnl.gov/software/venn-diagram-plotter), and we acknowledge PNNL and the OMICS.PNL.GOV website. For comparative analyses, the list of S. cerevisiae and C. albicans orthologs was obtained from the Candida Genome Database (candidagenome.org). For the analysis of the relationship between 3′ UTR length and mitochondrial function, the list of genes annotated to GO mitochondria was from Amigo 2, GO:0005739.
Supporting Information
Acknowledgments
We thank Wendy Olivas and Jürgen Wendland for their generous gifts of strains and plasmids, Nermin Celik for her help with the initial bioinformatics analyses, and Trevor Lithgow for comments on the manuscript. We acknowledge the support of the platforms at Monash University, Monash MicroImaging, the BioEM facility, as well as technical support from Kirill Tsyganov in the Bioinformatics Platform for Wig files suitable for gbrowse viewing.
Data Availability
The majority of the relevant data are within the paper and its Supporting Information files.The PAT-seq data utilized for 3’ analysis here is available in the NCBI Short Read Archive (accession number SRP056994). The S. cerevisiae data are available from GEO accession GSE53461 and for interactive viewing at http://rnasystems.erc.monash.edu/.
Funding Statement
This work was supported by grants from the Australian Research Council (ARC) (DP130100578 and DP1092850 to AT), the Australian National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) (APP1023973 to AT; APP1042851 and APP1042848 to THB), the Monash Researcher Accelerator Grant to AT, and a Monash Biomedicine Discovery Fellowship to THB. TQ was supported by an Australian Postgraduate Award (APA). JVG is an ARC DECRA Fellow, YQ was supported by an ARC SuperScience Fellowship and MB is a NHMRC Peter Doherty Fellow. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.
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Associated Data
This section collects any data citations, data availability statements, or supplementary materials included in this article.
Supplementary Materials
Data Availability Statement
The majority of the relevant data are within the paper and its Supporting Information files.The PAT-seq data utilized for 3’ analysis here is available in the NCBI Short Read Archive (accession number SRP056994). The S. cerevisiae data are available from GEO accession GSE53461 and for interactive viewing at http://rnasystems.erc.monash.edu/.