Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8470398 | Fungal Genetics and Biology | 2018 | 32 Pages |
Abstract
LaeA is a conserved global regulator of secondary metabolism and development in filamentous fungi. Examination of Aspergillus fumigatus transcriptome data of laeA deletion mutants have been fruitful in identifying genes and molecules contributing to the laeA mutant phenotype. One of the genes significantly down regulated in A. fumigatus ÎlaeA is metR, encoding a bZIP DNA binding protein required for sulfur and methionine metabolism in fungi. LaeA and MetR deletion mutants exhibit several similarities including down regulation of sulfur assimilation and methionine metabolism genes and ability to grow on the toxic sulfur analog, sodium selenate. However, unlike ÎmetR, ÎlaeA strains are able to grow on sulfur, sulfite, and cysteine. To examine if any parameter of the ÎlaeA phenotype is due to decreased metR expression, an over-expression allele (OE::metR) was placed in a ÎlaeA background. The OE::metR allele could not significantly restore expression of MetR regulated genes in ÎlaeA but did restore sensitivity to sodium selenate. In A. nidulans a second bZIP protein, MetZ, also regulates sulfur and methionine metabolism genes. However, addition of an OE::metZ construct to the A. fumigatus ÎlaeA OE::metR strain still was unable to rescue the ÎlaeA phenotype to wildtype with regards gliotoxin synthesis and virulence in a zebrafish aspergillosis model.
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Authors
Sachin Jain, Relebohile Sekonyela, Benjamin P. Knox, Jonathan M. Palmer, Anna Huttenlocher, Mehdi Kabbage, Nancy P. Keller,