The unique
α-aminoadipate pathway for lysine biosynthesis is present only in fungi and involves eight enzyme steps.
α-Aminoadipate semialdehyde dehydrogenase, commonly called
α-aminoadipate reductase (AAR), catalyzes the conversion of
α-aminoadipic acid to
α-aminoadipic semialdehyde by a novel mechanism. Two genes,
LYS2 and
LYS5, encode the heterodimeric enzyme in
Saccharomyces cerevisiae. The
LYS2 gene of
Candida albicans was shown to be contained in the 4.8-kb insert of the plasmid pCaLYS2. This plasmid complemented
lys2 mutants of both
S. cerevisiae and
C. albicans. The
S. cerevisiae and
C. albicans Lys2
+ transformants exhibited 138% and 160% of wild-type AAR activity, respectively. The DNA-sequence analysis of the 4.8-kb region
in plasmid pCaLYS2 and a PCR product from genomic DNA which overlapped with the 4.8-kb insert revealed a continuous ORF of
4173 nucleotides encoding 1391 amino-acid residues. The
C. albicans LYS2 ORF exhibited 63.0% identity at the nucleotide level and 56.2% identity at the amino-acid level to the
LYS2 gene of
S. cerevisiae. The ORF is preceded by consensus sequences for the TATA-, CAAT- and GCN4-box elements. An
S. cerevesiae-type transcription termination signal is seen in the 3′ flanking region. The deduced amino-acid sequence revealed a motif
for an AMP-binding site and also the highly conserved core sequences common to peptide antibiotic synthetases. The
LYS2 mRNA and
α-aminoadipate reductase activity were repressed to a higher level in YEPD-grown cells than in cells grown in the presence
of lysine or minimal medium. Additionally, AAR was shown to be feedback-inhibited by lysine and the lysine analog, thialysine.
The results of the present report reveal the molecular characteristics of the
LYS2 gene of
C. albicans, its homology to peptide antibiotic synthetases, its divergence from the
LYS2 gene of
S. cerevisiae, and the regulation of AAR in
C. albicans.
Key wordsCandida albicans - Lysine gene - α-Aminoadipate reductase - Regulation - Peptide antibiotic synthetase
Received: 19 December 1997 / Accepted: 8 January 1998