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A Gene Related to Yeast HOS2 Histone Deacetylase Affects Extracellular Depolymerase Expression and Virulence in a Plant Pathogenic Fungus 下载免费PDF全文
Dipnath Baidyaroy Gerald Brosch Joong-hoon Ahn Stefan Graessle Sigrun Wegener Nyerhovwo J. Tonukari Oscar Caballero Peter Loidl Jonathan D. Walton 《The Plant cell》2001,13(7):1609-1624
A gene, HDC1, related to the Saccharomyces cerevisiae histone deacetylase (HDAC) gene HOS2, was isolated from the filamentous fungus Cochliobolus carbonum, a pathogen of maize that makes the HDAC inhibitor HC-toxin. Engineered mutants of HDC1 had smaller and less septate conidia and exhibited an approximately 50% reduction in total HDAC activity. Mutants were strongly reduced in virulence as a result of reduced penetration efficiency. Growth of hdc1 mutants in vitro was normal on glucose, slightly decreased on sucrose, and reduced by 30 to 73% on other simple and complex carbohydrates. Extracellular depolymerase activities and expression of the corresponding genes were downregulated in hdc1 mutant strains. Except for altered conidial morphology, the phenotypes of hdc1 mutants were similar to those of C. carbonum strains mutated in ccSNF1 encoding a protein kinase necessary for expression of glucose-repressed genes. These results show that HDC1 has multiple functions in a filamentous fungus and is required for full virulence of C. carbonum on maize. 相似文献
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G Brosch M Dangl S Graessle A Loidl P Trojer E M Brandtner K Mair J D Walton D Baidyaroy P Loidl 《Biochemistry》2001,40(43):12855-12863
We have partially purified and characterized histone deacetylases of the plant pathogenic fungus Cochliobolus carbonum. Depending on growth conditions, this fungus produces HC-toxin, a specific histone deacetylase inhibitor. Purified enzymes were analyzed by immunoblotting, by immunoprecipitation, and for toxin sensitivity. The results demonstrate the existence of at least two distinct histone deacetylase activities. A high molecular weight complex (430,000) is sensitive to HC-toxin and trichostatin A and shows immunoreactivity with an antibody against Cochliobolus HDC2, an enzyme homologous to yeast RPD3. The second activity, a 60,000 molecular weight protein, which is resistant even to high concentrations of well-known deacetylase inhibitors, such as HC-toxin and trichostatin A, is not recognized by antibodies against Cochliobolus HDC1 (homologous to yeast HOS2) or HDC2 and represents a different and/or modified histone deacetylase which is enzymatically active in its monomeric form. This enzyme activity is not present in the related filamentous fungus Aspergillus nidulans. Furthermore, in vivo treatment of Cochliobolus mycelia with trichostatin A and analysis of HDACs during the transition from non-toxin-producing to toxin-producing stages support an HC-toxin-dependent enzyme activity profile. 相似文献
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Baidyaroy D Huber DH Fulbright DW Bertrand H 《Molecular plant-microbe interactions : MPMI》2000,13(1):88-95
A cytoplasmically transmissible hypovirulence syndrome has been identified in virus-free strains of the chestnut blight fungus Cryphonectria parasitica isolated from healing cankers on American chestnut trees in southwestern Michigan. The syndrome is associated with symptoms of fungal senescence, including a progressive decline in the growth potential and abundance of conidia, and elevated levels of respiration through the cyanide-insensitive alternative oxidase pathway. Conidia from senescing mycelia exhibited varying degrees of senescence ranging from normal growth to death soon after germination. Cytoplasmic transmission of hypovirulence between mycelia occurred by hyphal contact and coincided with the transfer of a specific restriction fragment length polymorphism from the mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) of the donor strains into the mtDNA of virulent recipients. The transmission of the senescence phenotype was observed not only among vegetatively compatible strains but also among incompatible strains. Hypovirulence was present in isolates from the same location with different nuclear genotypes as identified by DNA fingerprinting. This study confirms that mitochondrial hypovirulence can occur spontaneously and spread within a natural population of a phytopathogenic fungus. 相似文献
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Baidyaroy D Hausner G Hafez M Michel F Fulbright DW Bertrand H 《Fungal genetics and biology : FG & B》2011,48(8):775-783
In the chestnut-blight fungus Cryphonectria parasitica, cytoplasmically transmissible hypovirulence phenotypes frequently are elicited by double-stranded RNA (dsRNA) virus infections. However, some strains manifest cytoplasmically transmissible hypovirulence traits without containing any mycovirus. In this study, we describe an altered form of mtDNA that is associated with hypovirulence and senescence in a virus-free strain of C. parasitica, KFC9, which was obtained from nature and has an elevated level of cyanide-resistant respiration. In this strain, a 971-bp DNA element, named InC9, has been inserted into the first exon of the mitochondrial small-subunit ribosomal RNA (rns) gene. Sequence analysis indicates that InC9 is a type A1 group II intron that lacks a maturase-encoding ORF. RT-PCR analyses showed that the InC9 sequence is spliced inefficiently from the rRNA precursor. The KFC9 strain had very low amounts of mitochondrial ribosomes relative to virulent strains, thus most likely is deficient in mitochondrial protein synthesis and lacks at least some of the components of the cyanide-sensitive, cytochrome-mediated respiratory pathway. The attenuated-virulence trait and the splicing-defective intron are transferred asexually and concordantly by hyphal contact from hypovirulent donor strains to virulent recipients, confirming that InC9 causes hypovirulence. 相似文献
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