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Metabolic control of mitochondrial plasticity and extracellular vesicle biology drives Cryptococcus neoformans virulence

Fisher, M. C.; Hong, N.; Bai, X.; Yuan, H.; Yu, P.; Edwards, H.; Ma, Y.; Liao, W.; Chen, H.; Zheng, Q.; Wang, Y.; Wang, M.; Xu, J.; Chen, M.

2026-03-02 microbiology
10.64898/2026.03.02.708673 bioRxiv
Show abstract

Metabolic adaptation to nutrient stress is a key but poorly understood driver of fungal virulence. Here, we show that a dominant East Asian lineage of Cryptococcus neoformans (VNIa-5), which disproportionately infects immunocompetent hosts, has undergone lineage-specific rewiring of glucose-responsive stress pathways. Integrating population genomics, transcriptomics, and experimental infection models, we demonstrate that VNIa-5s clinical dominance is not explained by environmental prevalence. Instead, selective activation of Snf1 signalling links glucose limitation to mitochondrial tubularisation, extracellular vesicle remodelling, and enhanced melanization. Under low-glucose conditions, VNIa-5 exhibits marked mitochondrial plasticity and extracellular vesicle compositional shifts resembling hypervirulent outbreak lineages of Cryptococcus gattii. Following experimental induction of dormancy, VNIa-5 shows significantly increased virulence in vivo compared with the closely related but clinically rare VNIa-31 subclade, with host survival tightly correlated with mitochondrial morphology. These findings identify metabolic stress integration as a central mechanism shaping cryptococcal virulence and disease in immunocompetent human hosts.

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