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US20040121468A1 - Methods for regulating bud-hypha transitions and cAMP levels by the adenylate cyclase-associated protein gene, CAP1 - Google Patents

Methods for regulating bud-hypha transitions and cAMP levels by the adenylate cyclase-associated protein gene, CAP1
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US20040121468A1
US20040121468A1US10/755,399US75539904AUS2004121468A1US 20040121468 A1US20040121468 A1US 20040121468A1US 75539904 AUS75539904 AUS 75539904AUS 2004121468 A1US2004121468 A1US 2004121468A1
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cap1
gene
albicans
camp
cells
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US10/755,399
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Paula Sundstrom
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Dartmouth College
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Assigned to TRUSTEES OF DARTMOUTH COLLEGEreassignmentTRUSTEES OF DARTMOUTH COLLEGEASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST (SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS).Assignors: SUNDSTROM, PAULA
Assigned to NATIONAL INSTITUTES OF HEALTH (NIH), U.S. DEPT. OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES (DHHS), U.S. GOVERNMENTreassignmentNATIONAL INSTITUTES OF HEALTH (NIH), U.S. DEPT. OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES (DHHS), U.S. GOVERNMENTEXECUTIVE ORDER 9424, CONFIRMATORY LICENSEAssignors: DARTMOUTH COLLEGE
Assigned to NATIONAL INSTITUTES OF HEALTH - DIRECTOR DEITRreassignmentNATIONAL INSTITUTES OF HEALTH - DIRECTOR DEITRCONFIRMATORY LICENSE (SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS).Assignors: DARTMOUTH COLLEGE
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Abstract

The infection of a mammalian host by a microorganism can be prevented or treated through the disruption of theC. albicanshomologue of adenylate cyclase-associated protein gene. These methods may be used in the identification, prevention or treatment of microbial infection of mammalian hosts such as immunocompromised or immunosuppressed humans, for example, those having AIDS or undergoing transplantation or anti-cancer therapy.

Description

Claims (53)

I claim:
1. A method for interfering with morphogenic transitions of a fungus comprising the step of:
interfering with biochemical signaling pathways upon which a fungus relies for morphogenic transition.
2. The method ofclaim 1, wherein said method further comprises the step of reducing the virulent properties of said fungus.
3. The method ofclaim 2, wherein said virulent properties comprise adhesive properties.
4. The method ofclaim 3, wherein said adhesive properties comprise abilities of fungi to adhere to one or more human tissues.
5. The method ofclaim 4, wherein said human tissues are one or more human tissues selected from the group consisting of vaginal, penile, oral, esophageal, gastrointestinal, and umbilical tissues.
6. The method ofclaim 2, wherein said virulent properties comprise invasive properties.
7. The method ofclaim 6, wherein said invasive properties comprise abilities of fungi to degrade extracellular matrix proteins.
8. The method ofclaim 6, wherein said invasive properties comprise abilities of fungi to block neutrophil oxygen radical production and degranulation.
9. The method ofclaim 2, wherein said virulent properties comprise proliferative properties.
10. The method ofclaim 9, wherein said proliferative properties comprise abilities of fungus cells to induce their exit from other cells that have engulfed said fungus cells.
11. The method ofclaim 10, wherein said exit from other cells comprises the physical interaction by fungus cells of said other cells by hyphae.
12. The method ofclaim 1, wherein said fungus comprises a pathogenic yeast strain.
13. The method ofclaim 12, wherein said pathogenic yeast strain comprisesC. albicans.
14. The method ofclaim 1, wherein said morphogenic transitions comprise transitions from the budding form to the hyphal growth form.
15. The method ofclaim 1, wherein said biochemical signaling pathways comprise cAMP-PKA signaling pathways of said fungus.
16. The method ofclaim 15, wherein said interfering with said multifunctional cAMP-PKA signaling or other Cap1 function pathways of a fungus comprises the disruption of a gene associated with said pathway.
17. The method ofclaim 16, wherein said gene comprises theC. albicanshomolog of adenylate cyclase-associated protein (CAP1) gene.
18. The method ofclaim 17, wherein said disruption comprises interfering with the coding region of saidC. albicanshomolog of adenylate cyclase-associated protein (CAP1) gene.
19. The method ofclaim 17, wherein said homolog comprises the following isolated DNA sequence SEQ. ID. NO. 2:
ATGTCAACCGAGGAGAGTCAATTCAATGTTCAAGGTTACAATATTATCACAATCTTGAAAAGATTAGAGGCAGCAACGTCTCGTCTTGAGGACATTACCATTTTCCAAGAGGAAGCAAACAAAAACCACTATGGAGTTGATTCTCTCACTGAAAAGGGAACCCCCAAAAGCAGAACTGTTGAATCGTCAGAAGCAACTTCCGATGGTAAATCACTCGAATCTACATCATTTGCCACTTTTTCTGAAGCTCCTGTAGAAAAATCCAAATTGATTGTGGAATTTGAGAACTTTGTTGAAAGCTACGTTCATCCACTTGTTGAAACATCCAAAAAGATCGATTCCTTGGTGGGGGAGTCCGCCCAATATTTTTATGAGGCATTTGTCGAACAAGGGAAATTTTTGGAGCTTGTATTGCAATCCCAACAACCAGATATGACTGATCCAGCTTTGGCAAAGGCATTAGAACCAATGAATGCTAAATGCACCAAAATTAACGAATTAAAAGATTCCAATCGTAAATCTCCATTCTTCAATCATTTAAGCACTTTCAGTGAAAGTAATGCCGTTTTTTATTGGATTGGGATCCCTACACCAGTCTCGTACATTACTGATACTAAAGATACAGTCAAATTTTGGTCTGACAGAGTTTTAAAAGAATACAAGACCAAAGACCAAGTGCATGTTGAATGGGTAAAACAAACATTATCTGTTTTTGACGAATTGAAGAATTATGTTAAAGAATATCACACAACTGGTGTTGCTTGGAACCCCAAAGGAAAGCCTTTTGCAGAAGTTGTATCTCAGCAAACAGAGAGTGCTGCTAAGAATTCTTCGTCTGCTTCTGGTTCTGCAGGAGGAGCAGCTCCACCACCACCTCCACCTCCACCTCCAGCAACGTTTTTTGATGACACTGAAAAAGACAGTGAAAATCCATCTCCAGCTTCAGGTGGTATTAATGCGGTTTTTGCTGAATTGAATCAAGGTGCCAACATCACATCTGGTTTAAAAAAAGTCGACAAATCTGAGATGACGCATAAGAACCCTGAATTAAGAAAACAGCCACCAGTTGCACCAAAAAAACCAGCACCCCCAAAGAAGCCATCTAGTTTATCCGGTGGTGTGAGTTCAGCTCCAGTAAAGAAGCCTGCTAAGAAGGAGTTGATTGACGGTACAAAATGGATAATTCAAAATTTTACAAAAGCTGATATTTCCGATTTGAGTCCAATTACCATTGAAGTTGAGATGCATCAATCTGTTTTCATTGGTAATTGTAGTGATGTCACCATTCAGTTGAAAGGTAAAGCAAATGCAGTGTCGGTATCGGAAACCAAGAATGTGGCTCTTGTCATTGATTCGTTGATTTCCGGAGTCGATGTTATTAAATCCTACAAGTTTGGTATACAAGTTTTAGGTTTGGTACCAATGTTGAGTATTGATAAATCAGATGAAGGGACTATCTATTTGTCGCAAGAAAGCATTGACAATGATAGTCAGGTTTTTACTAGTAGCACTACAGCACTCAACATCAATGCACCAAAGGAAAATGATGATTATGAAGAATTGGCTGTTCCTGAACAATTTGTTAGTAAGGTTGTGAATGGCAAATTAGTCACTCAAATTGTTGAACATGCTGGATAA;
including any insertions, deletions, mutations, or modifications.
20. The method ofclaim 17, wherein said homolog encodes a polypeptide having the following sequence (SEQ. ID. NO. 1):
MSTEESQFNVQGYNIITILKRLEAATSRLEDITIFQEEANKNHYGVDSLTEKGTPKSRTVESSEATSDGKSLESTSFATFSEAPVEKSKLIVEFENFVESYVHPLVETSKKIDSLVGESAQYFYEAFVEQGKFLELVLQSQQPDMTDPALAKALEPMNAKCTKINELKDSNRKSPFFNHLSTFSESNAVFYWIGIPTPVSYITDTKDTVKFWSDRVLKEYKTKDQVHVEWVKQTLSVFDELKNYVKEYHTTGVAWNPKGKPFAEVVSQQTESAAKNSSSASGSAGGAAPPPPPPPPPATFFDDTEKDSENPSPASGGINAVFAELNQGANITSGLKKVDKSEMTHKNPELRKQPPVAPKKPAPPKKPSSLSGGVSSAPVKKPAKKELIDGTKWIIQNFTKADISDLSPITIEVEMHQSVFIGNCSDVTIQLKGKANAVSVSETKNVALVIDSLISGVDVIKSYKFGIQVLGLVPMLSIDKSDEGTIYLSQESIDNDSQVFTSSTTALNINAPKENDDYEELAVPEQFVSKVVNGKLVTQIVEHAG.
21. The method ofclaim 15, wherein said cAMP-PKA signaling pathways operate to increase levels of cAMP.
22. The method ofclaim 21, wherein said increased levels of cAMP operate to stimulate morphogenic transitions of said fungus.
23. The method ofclaim 1, wherein said biochemical signaling pathway is within a fungus that has infected a human.
24. The method ofclaim 23, wherein said human suffers from a disease.
25. The method ofclaim 24, wherein said disease is human immunodeficiency virus.
26. The method ofclaim 24, wherein said disease comprises complications associated with acquired immune deficiency syndrome.
27. The method ofclaim 24, wherein said disease comprises complications associated with an acquired immune deficiency syndrome related complex.
28. The method ofclaim 24, wherein said disease comprises one or more diseases selected from the group consisting of HIV, mucosal candidiasis, oral candidiasis, esophageal candidiasis, thrush, hemoatogenously disseminated candidiasis, and candida vaginitis.
29. The method ofclaim 23, wherein said human is immunocompromised.
30. The method ofclaim 23, wherein said human is an organ transplant recipient.
31. The method ofclaim 23, wherein said human is undergoing a treatment regimen.
32. The method ofclaim 31, wherein said treatment regimen is chemotherapy.
33. The method ofclaim 31, wherein said treatment regimen is a drug regimen.
34. The method ofclaim 33, wherein said drug regimen suppresses the immune system.
35. The method ofclaim 33, wherein said drug regimen incorporates the use of one or more drugs that are selected from the group consisting of azathioprine, steroids, cyclosporine, antilymphocyte globulins, monoclonal anti-T cell antibodies, prednisone, methylprednisone, and cyclophosphamide.
36. A microarray comprising at least one nucleotide sequence or fragment thereof, of the CAP1 gene.
37. A method for detecting a gene expression product capable of stimulating increases in cAMP levels in a microorganism, comprising the steps of:
hybridizing labeled cDNA created from isolated mRNA from a fungal strain onto a microarray comprising at least one nucleotide sequence or fragment thereof, of the CAP1 gene;
assessing expression level or lack thereof of a gene expression product of said fungal strain.
38. The method ofclaim 37, wherein said fungal strain contain theC. albicanshomolog of the adenylate cyclase-associated protein (CAP1) gene.
39. The method ofclaim 37, wherein said increase in cAMP levels promote bud/hypha transitions of said microorganism.
40. The method ofclaim 37, wherein said microorganism is selected from the group consisting of bacteria, yeast and fungus.
41. The method ofclaim 37, wherein said microorganism is a yeast.
42. The method ofclaim 37, wherein said microorganism isC. albicans.
43. A method for identifying potential virulence genes in fungus comprising the step of comparing the gene expression products in at least two different fungal strains.
44. The method ofclaim 43, wherein said comparing step comprises:
co-hybridizing a labeled first cDNA from isolated mRNA from a first fungal strain and a labeled second cDNA from isolated mRNA from a second fungal strain to a microarray, wherein said microarray comprises at least one fungal nucleotide sequence or fragment thereof ofC. albicans;
comparing hybridization signals from said cDNA of said first fungal strain and the said cDNA of said second fungal strain.
45. The method ofclaim 44, further comprising the step of isolating cDNA of interest.
46. The method ofclaim 44, wherein said first fungal strain is a mutant fungal strain.
47. The method ofclaim 46, wherein said fungal strain contain theC. albicanshomolog of the adenylate cyclase-associated protein (CAP1) gene.
48. The method ofclaim 44, wherein said second fungal strain is a parental fungal strain.
49. The method ofclaim 48, wherein said fungal strain contain theC. albicanshomolog of the adenylate cyclase-associated protein (CAP1) gene.
50. The method ofclaim 44, wherein said second fungal strain is a revertant fungal strain.
51. The method ofclaim 50, wherein said fungal strain contain theC. albicanshomolog of the adenylate cyclase-associated protein (CAP1) gene.
52. The method ofclaim 43, wherein said fungus is a pathogenic or nonpathogenic yeast strain.
53. The method ofclaim 52, wherein said pathogenic yeast strain isCandida albicans.
US10/755,3992001-03-092004-01-13Methods for regulating bud-hypha transitions and cAMP levels by the adenylate cyclase-associated protein gene, CAP1AbandonedUS20040121468A1 (en)

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US09/801,774US6706688B2 (en)2001-03-092001-03-09Methods for regulating bud-hypha transitions and cAMP levels by the adenylate cyclase-associated protein gene, CAP1
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US7270975B2 (en)2001-03-092007-09-18Trustees Of Dartmouth CollegeMethods for regulating bud-hypha transitions and cAMP levels in Candida albicans
GB0223272D0 (en)*2002-10-082002-11-13Oxford Glycosciences Uk LtdA protein involved in therapy
US9123577B2 (en)2012-12-122015-09-01Sandisk Technologies Inc.Air gap isolation in non-volatile memory using sacrificial films

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US6706688B2 (en)2004-03-16
WO2002072129B1 (en)2003-01-16
US20030104994A1 (en)2003-06-05
EP1372687A1 (en)2004-01-02
WO2002072129A1 (en)2002-09-19

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Effective date:20050120

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Free format text:EXECUTIVE ORDER 9424, CONFIRMATORY LICENSE;ASSIGNOR:DARTMOUTH COLLEGE;REEL/FRAME:021030/0985

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