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1.
Mucor circinelloides responds to blue light by activating the biosynthesis of carotenoids. Gene crgA acts as a repressor of this light-regulated process, as its inactivation leads to overaccumulation of carotenoids in both the dark and the light. The predicted CrgA protein contains different recognizable structural domains, including a RING-finger zinc-binding motif, several glutamine-rich regions, a putative nuclear localization signal and an isoprenylation domain. To gain insight into the specific mode of action of the CrgA protein, we sought to define the CrgA domains critical for the light regulation of carotenogenesis. For this, mutant crgA alleles harbouring missense or deletion mutations in conserved residues of those domains were generated, and their functionality was assessed by testing their ability to complement a null crgA mutation. Point mutations of the amino-terminal RING-finger domain abrogated the ability of CrgA to repress carotenogenesis in the dark, as did the deletion of a poly glutamine-rich region at the carboxyl domain of CrgA. In contrast, mutations of the isoprenylation domain only slightly affected the CrgA function in carotenogenesis. The results identify two functional domains presumably involved in protein-protein interaction in the CrgA protein and suggest a role for the ubiquitin-proteasome pathway in the light regulation of carotenogenesis in fungi.  相似文献   

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On solid media, the reproductive growth of Streptomyces involves antibiotic biosynthesis coincident with the erection of filamentous aerial hyphae. Following cessation of growth of an aerial hypha, multiple septation occurs at the tip to form a chain of unigenomic spores. A gene, crgA, that coordinates several aspects of this reproductive growth is described. The gene product is representative of a well-conserved family of small actinomycete proteins with two C-terminal hydrophobic-potential membrane-spanning segments. In Streptomyces avermitilis, crgA is required for sporulation, and inactivation of the gene abolished most sporulation septation in aerial hyphae. Disruption of the orthologous gene in Streptomyces coelicolor indicates that whereas CrgA is not essential for sporulation in this species, during growth on glucose-containing media, it influences the timing of the onset of reproductive growth, with precocious erection of aerial hyphae and antibiotic production by the mutant. Moreover, CrgA subsequently acts to inhibit sporulation septation prior to growth arrest of aerial hyphae. Overexpression of CrgA in S. coelicolor, uncoupling any nutritional and growth phase-dependent regulation, results in growth of nonseptated aerial hyphae on all media tested, consistent with a role for the protein in inhibiting sporulation septation.  相似文献   

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Protein ubiquitylation plays a major role in the regulation of cellular processes mainly through proteasome-dependent degradation, although it has become increasingly clear that it is also involved in other processes. In the fungus Mucor circinelloides, blue light regulates carotene biosynthesis, with this response controlled by crgA and mcwc-1c genes. CrgA shows characteristics of ubiquitin ligases and represses carotenogenesis in the dark, whereas mcwc-1c is a white collar 1-like gene required for its light induction. Another two white collar 1-like genes have been identified in M. circinelloides: mcwc-1a, which is involved in phototropism, and mcwc-1b, of unknown function. Analysis of double knockout mutants generated for crgA and every mcwc-1 gene demonstrated that crgA and mcwc-1c regulate carotenogenesis by independent pathways. It was also shown that the effect of crgA on carotenogenesis is mediated by mcwc-1b, which acts as a carotenogenesis activator. CrgA is involved in proteolysis-independent mono- and di-ubiquitylation of MCWC-1b, which results in its inactivation. Regulation of carotenogenesis in M. circinelloides by proteolysis-independent ubiquitylation suggests that this mechanism of control could be more widespread than previously thought.  相似文献   

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The RING finger protein CrgA acts as a negative regulator of light-induced carotene biosynthesis in the fungus Mucor circinelloides. Sequence analysis of the crgA coding region upstream of the first AUG codon revealed the existence of an additional non-canonical RING finger domain at the most N-terminal end of the protein. The newly identified RING finger domain is required for CrgA to regulate photocarotenogenesis, as deduced from site-directed mutagenesis experiments. The role of both RING finger domains in the stability of CrgA has been investigated in a yeast system. Wild type CrgA, but not the RING finger deleted forms, is highly unstable and is stabilized by inhibition of the proteasome function, which suggests that native CrgA is degraded by the proteasome and that active RING finger domains are required for proteasome-mediated CrgA degradation. To identify the translation start of CrgA, a mutational analysis of putative initiation codons in the 5' region of the crgA gene was accomplished. We demonstrated that a GUG codon located upstream of the first AUG is the sole initiator of CrgA translation. To our knowledge, this is the first report of a naturally occurring non-AUG start codon for a RING finger regulatory protein. A combination of suboptimal translation initiation and proteasome degradation may help to maintain the low cellular levels of CrgA observed in wild type cells, which is probably required for accurate regulation of photocarotenogenesis.  相似文献   

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This work describes the isolation and characterization of crgA, a Mucor circinelloides gene, which has a dominant-positive effect on light-regulated carotenogenesis. The crgA gene was originally identified in a transformation experiment as a 3'-truncated open reading frame which caused carotenoid overaccumulation in the dark. The complete cloning and sequencing of crgA revealed that its putative product presented several recognizable structural domains: a RING-finger zinc binding domain near the N-terminus, a putative nuclear localization signal, two stretches of acidic amino acids, glutamine-rich regions and a putative isoprenylation motif. The expression of exogenous copies of the complete crgA gene or two different 3'-truncated versions, produced a similar dominant-positive effect on the light-inducible carotenogenesis of M. circinelloides. The presence of these exogenous sequences also caused a missregulation of the endogenous crgA gene, resulting in its overexpression. Collectively, these observations suggest that crgA is involved in the regulation of carotenoid biosynthesis by light.  相似文献   

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A gene of Blakeslea trispora has been cloned by heterologous hybridization with the Mucor circinelloides crgA gene, a repressor of light-inducible carotenogenesis. This gene is the ortholog of the M. circinelloides crgA, since it was able to restore the wild-type phenotype of a null crgA mutant of M. circinelloides. The expression of B. trispora crgA gene is light-induced and photoadapted, as occurs for M. circinelloides crgA. Light induction and photoadaptation of B. trispora crgA was also observed in M. circinelloides, which suggests that the mechanisms involved in light regulation are basically conserved between these filamentous fungi. Conservation of the regulatory pathway that controls carotene biosynthesis was supported by the light-induced and photoadapted expression of all structural carotenogenic genes of B. trispora. Consequently, the beta-carotene content of dark grown mycelia of B. trispora increased upon illumination with white light.  相似文献   

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The role(s) in cell division of the Mycobacterium tuberculosis Rv0011c gene product, a homolog of the Streptomyces CrgA protein that is responsible for coordinating growth and cytokinesis in sporogenic aerial hyphae, is largely unknown. We show that an enhanced cyan fluorescent protein-M. tuberculosis CrgA (ECFP-CrgA(MT)) fusion protein is localized to the cell membrane, midcell, and cell pole regions in Mycobacterium smegmatis. Furthermore, the ECFP-CrgA(MT) fusion protein colocalized with FtsZ-enhanced yellow fluorescent protein (EYFP) in M. smegmatis. Bacterial two-hybrid assays indicated strong interactions of M. tuberculosis CrgA with FtsZ, FtsQ, and the class B penicillin-binding proteins, FtsI (PBPB) and PBPA. The midcell localization of CrgA(MT) was severely compromised under conditions of FtsZ depletion, which indicated that CrgA localizes to the midcell region after assembly of the FtsZ ring. M. tuberculosis cells with reduced CrgA levels were elongated and grew more slowly than wild-type cells, which indicated defects in cell division, whereas CrgA overproduction did not show growth defects. A M. smegmatis ΔcrgA strain exhibited a bulged cell morphology, elongated cells with a chain-like phenotype, cells with polar bulbous structures, and a modest growth defect. FtsZ and FtsI levels were not affected in cells producing altered levels of CrgA. Septal and membrane localization of GFP-FtsI was enhanced by CrgA overproduction and was diminished in a ΔcrgA strain, which indicates that one role of CrgA is to promote and/or stabilize FtsI localization. Overall, these data indicate that CrgA is a novel member of the cell division complex in mycobacteria and possibly facilitates septum formation.  相似文献   

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The product of the crgA gene of Streptomyces coelicolor represents a novel family of small proteins. A single orthologous gene is located close to the origin of replication of all fully sequenced actinomycete genomes and borders a conserved gene cluster implicated in cell growth and division. In S. coelicolor, CrgA is important for coordinating growth and cell division in sporogenic hyphae. In this study, we demonstrate that CrgA is an integral membrane protein whose peak expression is coordinated with the onset of development of aerial hyphae. The protein localizes to discrete foci away from growing hyphal tips. Upon overexpression, CrgA localizes to apical syncytial cells of aerial hyphae and inhibits the formation of productive cytokinetic rings of the bacterial tubulin homolog FtsZ, leading to proteolytic turnover of this major cell division determinant. In the absence of known prokaryotic cell division inhibitors in actinomycetes, CrgA may have an important conserved function influencing Z-ring formation in these bacteria.  相似文献   

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The phytopathogenic fungus Fusarium oxysporum is a model organism in the study of plant-fungus interactions. As other Fusarium species, illuminated cultures of F. oxysporum exhibit an orange pigmentation because of the synthesis of carotenoids, and its genome contains orthologous light-regulated car genes for this biosynthetic pathway. By chemical mutagenesis, we obtained carotenoid overproducing mutants of F. oxysporum, called carS, with upregulated mRNA levels of the car genes. To identify the regulatory gene responsible for this phenotype, a collection of T-DNA insertional mutants obtained by Agrobacterium mediated transformation was screened for carotenoid overproduction. Three candidate transformants exhibited a carS-like phenotype, and two of them contained T-DNA insertions in the same genomic region. The insertions did not affect the integrity of any annotated ORFs, but were linked to a gene coding for a putative RING-finger (RF) protein. Based on its similarity to the RF protein CrgA from the zygomycete Mucor circinelloides, whose mutation results in a similar carotenoid deregulation, this gene (FOXG_09307) was investigated in detail. Its expression was not affected in the transformants, but mutant alleles were found in several carS mutants. A strain carrying a partial FOXG_09307 deletion, fortuitously generated in a targeted transformation experiment, exhibited the carS phenotype. This mutant and a T-DNA insertional mutant holding a 5-bp insertion in FOXG_09307 were complemented with the wild type FOXG_09307 allele. We conclude that this gene is carS, encoding a RF protein involved in down-regulation of F. oxysporum carotenogenesis.  相似文献   

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