Major Candida albicans virulence traits include its ability to make hyphae, to produce a biofilm, and to damage host cells. These traits depend upon expression of hypha-associated genes. A gene expression comparison among clinical isolates suggested that transcription factor Rme1, established by previous studies to be a positive regulator of chlamydospore formation, may also be a negative regulator of hypha-associated genes. Engineered RME1 overexpression supported this hypothesis, but no relevant rme1Δ/Δ mutant phenotype was detected. We reasoned that Rme1 may function within a specific regulatory pathway. This idea was supported by our finding that an rme1Δ/Δ mutation relieves the need for biofilm regulator Brg1 in biofilm formation. The impact of the rme1Δ/Δ mutation is most prominent under static or "biofilm-like" growth conditions. RNA sequencing (RNA-seq) of cells grown under biofilm-like conditions indicates that Brg1 activates hypha-associated genes indirectly via repression of RME1: hypha-associated gene expression levels are substantially reduced in a brg1Δ/Δ mutant and partially restored in a brg1Δ/Δ rme1Δ/Δ double mutant. An rme1Δ/Δ mutation does not simply bypass Brg1, because iron homeostasis genes depend upon Brg1 regardless of Rme1. Rme1 thus connects Brg1 to the targets relevant to hypha and biofilm formation under biofilm growth conditions.IMPORTANCECandida albicans is a major fungal pathogen of humans, and its ability to grow as a surface-associated biofilm on implanted devices is a common cause of infection. Here, we describe a new regulator of biofilm formation, RME1, whose activity is most prominent under biofilm-like growth conditions.