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The Heterotrimeric Transcription Factor CCAAT-Binding Complex and Ca 2+ -CrzA Signaling Reversely Regulate the Transition between Fungal Hyphal Growth and Asexual Reproduction
Author(s) -
Yiran Ren,
Chi Zhang,
Ziqing Chen,
Ling Lü
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
mbio
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.562
H-Index - 121
eISSN - 2161-2129
pISSN - 2150-7511
DOI - 10.1128/mbio.03007-21
Subject(s) - heterotrimeric g protein , transcription factor , microbiology and biotechnology , hypha , reproduction , chemistry , biology , signal transduction , botany , ecology , genetics , gene , g protein
The life cycle of filamentous fungi generally comprises hyphal growth and asexual reproduction. Both growth and propagation processes are critical for invasion growth, spore dissemination, and virulence in fungal pathogens and for the production of secondary metabolites or for biomass accumulation in industrial filamentous fungi. The C CAAT- b inding c omplex (CBC) is a heterotrimeric transcription factor comprising three subunits, HapB, HapC, and HapE, and is highly conserved in fungi. Previous studies revealed that CBC regulates sterol metabolism by repressing several genes in the ergosterol biosynthetic pathway in the human fungal pathogen Aspergillus fumigatus . In the present study, we found dysfunction of CBC caused the abnormal asexual reproduction (conidiation) in submerged liquid culture. CBC suppresses the activation of the brlA gene in the central regulatory pathway for conidiation combined with its upstream regulators fluG , flbD , and flbC by binding to the 5′-CCAAT-3′ motif within conidiation gene promoters, and lack of CBC member HapB results in the upregulation of these genes. Furthermore, when the expression of brlA or flbC is repressed, the submerged conidiation does not happen in the hapB mutant. Interestingly, deletion of HapB leads to enhanced transient cytosolic Ca 2+ levels and activates conidiation-positive inducer Ca 2+ -CrzA modules to enhance submerged conidiation, demonstrating that CrzA works with CBC as a reverse regulator of fungal conidiation. To the best of our knowledge, the finding of this study is the first report for the molecular switch mechanism between vegetative hyphal growth and asexual development regulated by CBC, in concert with Ca 2+ -CrzA signaling in A. fumigatus .

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