RESPIRATORY METABOLISM OF NORMAL AND DIVISIONLESS STRAINS OF CANDIDA ALBICANS

Respiration of a normal strain of Candida albicans was compared with that of a divisionless mutant which has a biochemical lesion such that metabolically generated hydrogen "spills over," during growth, for non-specific dye reduction. This waste is not at expense of growth, since both strains grow at essentially similar rates, nor at expense of respiration, since the mutant reduces oxygen more rapidly than the normal strain. Respiration in both strains is qualitatively similar, and seemingly unique among highly aerobic organisms in that it is not mediated by cytochrome oxidase. In resting cells of both strains, respiration is not only resistant to, but markedly stimulated by, high concentrations of cyanide, carbon monoxide, and azide. In contrast, growth of these yeasts is inhibited by low concentrations of cyanide and azide. Cytochrome oxidase could not be detected in cell-free preparations; reduced cytochrome c was not oxidized by such preparations. Cytochrome bands could not be observed in thick cell suspensions treated with reducing agents. However, incorporation of superoptimal levels of zinc and iron into the culture medium resulted in growth of cells possessing distinct cytochrome bands; respiration of these cells remained insensitive to cyanide, monoxide, and azide, and the bands were maintained in a reduced form on oxygenation. In the divisionless yeast, tetrazolium dyes compete with oxygen for reduction; this is not the case in the normal strain. The firmness with which hydrogen transfer is channeled in the latter for reduction of disulfide bonds (of importance in the division mechanism) and of oxygen, is contrasted with the lack of such control in the mutant.