Aquaporins are small, integral membrane channels that facilitate the transport of water across cellular membranes and, in the case of aquaglyceroporins, can also conduct specific neutral solutes, such as glycerol. These proteins are conserved across biological kingdoms, yet their roles in fungal virulence remain relatively understudied. In Cryptococcus neoformans , an opportunistic fungal pathogen, we examined the organism's single aquaporin, Aqp1, and uncovered unanticipated influences on cellular morphology. Loss of Aqp1 resulted in smaller cells, whereas its presence promoted the formation of enlarged titan-like cells. This shift in size was closely linked to intracellular redox physiology. Consequently, the overexpression of the cryptococcal aquaporin increased sensitivity to oxidative stress and led to the largest titan-like cells; antioxidant supplementation suppressed this enlargement, consistent with a ROS-dependent regulatory mechanism. Additionally, Aqp1 overexpression produced vacuolar abnormalities in titan-like cells, suggesting that excessive water influx strained intracellular organization during rapid cell expansion. These findings position Aqp1 at a functional crossroads connecting membrane transport, oxidative balance, and size control, and they support a model in which an aquaporin contributes to the morphological plasticity that allows C. neoformans to adapt to environmental pressures.
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Piotr R. Stempinski
J. Alberto Patino-Medina
Francisco Hernandez
Johns Hopkins University
Johns Hopkins Medicine
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Stempinski et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69a75e9bc6e9836116a2963d — DOI: https://doi.org/10.64898/2026.01.29.702379