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1.
Front Bioeng Biotechnol ; 10: 1000129, 2022.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36277400

ABSTRACT

Fusarium fujikuroi, a model organism for secondary metabolism in fungi, produces carotenoids, terpenoid pigments with antioxidant activity. Previous results indicate that carotenoid synthesis in F. fujikuroi is stimulated by light or by different stress conditions and downregulated by a RING finger protein encoded by carS gene. Here, we have analyzed the effects of three stressors, nitrogen scarcity, heat shock, and oxidative stress. We compared them with the effect of light in the wild type, a carS mutant that overproduces carotenoids, and its complemented strain. The assayed stressors increase the synthesis of carotenoids in the three strains, but mRNA levels of structural genes of carotenogenesis, carRA and carB, are only enhanced in the presence of a functional carS gene. In the wild-type strain, the four conditions affect in different manners the mRNA levels of carS: greater in the presence of light, without significant changes in nitrogen starvation, and with patent decreases after heat shock or oxidative stress, suggesting different activation mechanisms. The spores of the carS mutant are more resistant to H2O2 than those of the wild type; however, the mutant shows a greater H2O2 sensitivity at the growth level, which may be due to the participation of CarS in the regulation of genes with catalase domains, formerly described. A possible mechanism of regulation by heat stress has been found in the alternative splicing of the intron of the carS gene, located close to its 3' end, giving rise to the formation of a shorter protein. This action could explain the inducing effect of the heat shock, but not of the other inducing conditions, which may involve other mechanisms of action on the CarS regulator, either transcriptionally or post-transcriptionally.

2.
BMC Genomics ; 20(1): 67, 2019 Jan 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30665350

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: The orange pigmentation of the agar cultures of many Fusarium species is due to the production of carotenoids, terpenoid pigments whose synthesis is stimulated by light. The genes of the carotenoid pathway and their regulation have been investigated in detail in Fusarium fujikuroi. In this and other Fusarium species, such as F. oxysporum, deep-pigmented mutants affected in the gene carS, which encodes a protein of the RING-finger family, overproduce carotenoids irrespective of light. The induction of carotenogenesis by light and its deregulation in carS mutants are achieved on the transcription of the structural genes of the pathway. We have carried out global RNA-seq transcriptomics analyses to investigate the relationship between the regulatory role of CarS and the control by light in these fungi. RESULTS: The absence of a functional carS gene or the illumination exert wide effects on the transcriptome of F. fujikuroi, with predominance of genes activated over repressed and a greater functional diversity in the case of genes induced by light. The number of the latter decreases drastically in a carS mutant (1.1% vs. 4.8% in the wild-type), indicating that the deregulation produced by the carS mutation affects the light response of many genes. Moreover, approximately 27% of the genes activated at least 2-fold by light or by the carS mutation are coincident, raising to 40% for an 8-fold activation threshold. As expected, the genes with the highest changes under both regulatory conditions include those involved in carotenoid metabolism. In addition, light and CarS strongly influence the expression of some genes associated with stress responses, including three genes with catalase domains, consistent with roles in the control of oxidative stress. The effects of the CarS mutation or light in the transcriptome of F. oxysporum were partially coincident with those of F. fujikuroi, indicating the conservation of the objectives of their regulatory mechanisms. CONCLUSIONS: The CarS RING finger protein down-regulates many genes whose expression is up-regulated by light in wild strains of the two investigated Fusarium species, indicating a regulatory interplay between the mechanism of action of the CarS protein and the control by light.


Subject(s)
Fungal Proteins/physiology , Fusarium/genetics , Gene Expression Regulation, Fungal/radiation effects , Light , Fungal Proteins/genetics , Fusarium/metabolism , Fusarium/radiation effects , Gene Expression Profiling , Mutation , Transcriptional Activation , Transcriptome/radiation effects
3.
J Fungi (Basel) ; 3(3)2017 Jul 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29371556

ABSTRACT

Many fungi of the genus Fusarium stand out for the complexity of their secondary metabolism. Individual species may differ in their metabolic capacities, but they usually share the ability to synthesize carotenoids, a family of hydrophobic terpenoid pigments widely distributed in nature. Early studies on carotenoid biosynthesis in Fusariumaquaeductuum have been recently extended in Fusarium fujikuroi and Fusarium oxysporum, well-known biotechnological and phytopathogenic models, respectively. The major Fusarium carotenoid is neurosporaxanthin, a carboxylic xanthophyll synthesized from geranylgeranyl pyrophosphate through the activity of four enzymes, encoded by the genes carRA, carB, carT and carD. These fungi produce also minor amounts of ß-carotene, which may be cleaved by the CarX oxygenase to produce retinal, the rhodopsin's chromophore. The genes needed to produce retinal are organized in a gene cluster with a rhodopsin gene, while other carotenoid genes are not linked. In the investigated Fusarium species, the synthesis of carotenoids is induced by light through the transcriptional induction of the structural genes. In some species, deep-pigmented mutants with up-regulated expression of these genes are affected in the regulatory gene carS. The molecular mechanisms underlying the control by light and by the CarS protein are currently under investigation.

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