Genistein effects on growth and cell cycle of Candida albicans.
Publication/Presentation Date
1-1-2001
Abstract
Microbial virulence is generally considered to be multifactorial with infection resulting from the sum of several globally regulated virulence factors. Estrogen may serve as a signal for global virulence induction in Candida albicans. Nonsteroidal estrogens and estrogen receptor antagonists may therefore have interesting effects on yeast and their virulence factors. Growth of C. albicans was monitored by viable plate counts at timed intervals after inoculation into yeast nitrogen broth plus glucose. To determine if increased growth of yeast in the presence of estradiol was due to tyrosine kinase-mediated signaling, we measured growth in the presence of genistein, estradiol or genistein plus estradiol and compared these conditions to controls, which were not supplemented with either compound. Unexpectedly, genistein stimulated growth of C. albicans. In addition, genistein was found to increase the rate of germination (possibly reflecting release from G(0) into G(1) cell cycle phase) and also increased Hsp90 expression, demonstrated by a dot blot technique which employed a commercial primary antibody detected with chemiluminescence with horseradish peroxidase-labeled secondary antibody. These biological effects may be attributable to genistein's activity as a phytoestrogen. In contrast, nafoxidine suppressed growth of Candida and mildly diminished Hsp90 expression. This study raises the possibility of receptor cross-talk between estrogen and isoflavinoid compounds, and antiestrogens which may affect the same signaling system, though separate targets for each compound were not ruled out.
Volume
8
Issue
2
First Page
153
Last Page
159
ISSN
1021-7770
Published In/Presented At
Yazdanyar, A., Essmann, M., & Larsen, B. (2001). Genistein effects on growth and cell cycle of Candida albicans. Journal of biomedical science, 8(2), 153–159. https://doi.org/10.1007/BF02256407
Disciplines
Medicine and Health Sciences
PubMedID
11287745
Department(s)
Department of Emergency Medicine
Document Type
Article