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Autophagy‐related gene BbATG11 is indispensable for pexophagy and mitophagy, and contributes to stress response, conidiation and virulence in the insect mycopathogen Beauveria bassiana
Author(s) -
Ding JinLi,
Peng YueJin,
Chu XinLing,
Feng MingGuang,
Ying ShengHua
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
environmental microbiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.954
H-Index - 188
eISSN - 1462-2920
pISSN - 1462-2912
DOI - 10.1111/1462-2920.14329
Subject(s) - conidiation , autophagy , mitophagy , biology , microbiology and biotechnology , virulence , mutant , beauveria bassiana , gene , biochemistry , botany , apoptosis , biological pest control
Summary Autophagy is a conserved degradation system in eukaryotic cells that includes non‐selective and selective processes. Selective autophagy functions as a selective degradation mechanism for specific substrates in which autophagy‐related protein 11 (ATG11) acts as an essential scaffold protein. In B. bassiana , there is a unique ATG11 family protein, which is designated as BbATG11 . Disruption of BbATG11 resulted in significantly reduced conidial germination under starvation stress. The mutant Δ BbATG11 displayed enhanced sensitivity to oxidative stress and impaired asexual reproduction. The conidial yield was reduced by approximately 75%, and this defective phenotype could be repressed by increasing exogenous nutrients. The virulence of the Δ BbATG11 mutant strain was significantly impaired as indicated in topical and intra‐hemocoel injection bioassays, with a greater reduction in topical infection. Notably, BbATG11 was involved in pexophagy and mitophagy, but these two autophagic processes appeared in different fungal physiological aspects. Both pexophagy and mitophagy were associated with nutrient shift, starvation stress and growth in the host hemocoel, but only pexophagy appeared in both oxidation‐stressed cells and aerial mycelia. This study highlights that BbATG11 mediates pexophagy and mitophagy in B. bassiana and links selective autophagy to the fungal stress response, conidiation and virulence.