Publications

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2016
Ahmed, S. A., Z. Khan, X. -wei Wang, T. A. A. Moussa, H. S. Al-Zahrani, O. A. Almaghrabi, D. A. Sutton, S. Ahmad, J. Z. Groenewald, A. Alastruey-Izquierdo, et al., "Chaetomium-like fungi causing opportunistic infections in humans: a possible role for extremotolerance", Fungal Diversity, vol. 76, no. 1: Springer Netherlands, pp. 11–26, 2016. Abstract
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2015
Yu, J., G. Walther, A. D. Van Diepeningen, A. H. G. G. van den Ende, R. - Y. Li, T. A. A. Moussa, O. A. Almaghrabi, and G. S. de Hoog, "DNA barcoding of clinically relevant Cunninghamella species", Medical mycology, vol. 53, no. 2: Oxford University Press, pp. 99–106, 2015. Abstractmed_mycol-2015-yu-99-106.pdf

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2010
Schrettl, M., N. Beckmann, J. Varga, T. Heinekamp, I. D. Jacobsen, C. Joechl, T. A. Moussa, S. Wang, F. Gsaller, M. Blatzer, et al., "HapX-Mediated Adaption to Iron Starvation Is Crucial for Virulence of Aspergillus fumigatus", Plos Pathogens, vol. 6, 2010. AbstractWebsite

Iron is essential for a wide range of cellular processes. Here we show that the bZIP-type regulator HapX is indispensable for the transcriptional remodeling required for adaption to iron starvation in the opportunistic fungal pathogen Aspergillus fumigatus. HapX represses iron-dependent and mitochondrial-localized activities including respiration, TCA cycle, amino acid metabolism, iron-sulfur-cluster and heme biosynthesis. In agreement with the impact on mitochondrial metabolism, HapX-deficiency decreases resistance to tetracycline and increases mitochondrial DNA content. Pathways positively affected by HapX include production of the ribotoxin AspF1 and siderophores, which are known virulence determinants. Iron starvation causes a massive remodeling of the amino acid pool and HapX is essential for the coordination of the production of siderophores and their precursor ornithine. Consistent with HapX-function being limited to iron depleted conditions and A. fumigatus facing iron starvation in the host, HapX-deficiency causes significant attenuation of virulence in a murine model of aspergillosis. Taken together, this study demonstrates that HapX-dependent adaption to conditions of iron starvation is crucial for virulence of A. fumigatus.

Schrettl, M., N. Beckmann, J. Varga, T. Heinekamp, I. D. Jacobsen, C. Jöchl, T. A. Moussa, S. Wang, F. Gsaller, M. Blatzer, et al., "HapX-mediated adaption to iron starvation is crucial for virulence of Aspergillus fumigatus", PLoS pathogens, vol. 6, no. 9: Public Library of Science, pp. e1001124, 2010. Abstract
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2009
Yasmin, S., B. Abt, M. Schrettl, T. A. A. Moussa, E. R. Werner, and H. Haas, "The interplay between iron and zinc metabolism in Aspergillus fumigatus", Fungal Genetics and Biology, vol. 46, pp. 707-713, 2009. AbstractWebsite

Zinc plays a critical role in a diverse array of biochemical processes. However, excess of zinc is deleterious to cells. Therefore, cells require finely tuned homeostatic mechanisms to balance uptake and storage of zinc. Here we show that iron starvation affects zinc metabolism by downregulating expression of the plasma membrane zinc importer encoding zrfB and upregulating the putative vacuolar zinc transporter-encoding zrcA in Aspergillus fumigatus. Nevertheless, the zinc content of iron-starved mycelia exceeded that of iron replete mycelia, possibly due to unspecific metal uptake induced by iron starvation. In agreement with increased zinc excess and zinc toxicity during iron starvation, deficiency in siderophore-mediated high-affinity iron uptake caused hypersensitivity to zinc. Moreover, an increase of zinc uptake by conditional overexpression of zrfB was more toxic under iron depleted compared to iron replete conditions. This deregulated zinc uptake under iron starvation caused a decrease in heme production and an increase in protoporphyrin IX accumulation. Furthermore, zinc excess impaired production of the extracellular siderophore triacetylfusarinine C but not the intracellular siderophore ferricrocin. Taken together, these data demonstrate a fine tuned coordination of zinc and iron metabolism in A. fumigatus. (c) 2009 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.