Affiliation:
1. Department of Molecular and Cellular Biology, Centro de Investigaciones Biológicas (CIB) Margarita Salas, Spanish Research Council (CSIC), Ramiro de Maeztu, 9, 28040 Madrid, Spain
Abstract
In the filamentous ascomycete Aspergillus nidulans, at least three high hierarchy transcription factors are required for growth at extracellular alkaline pH: SltA, PacC and CrzA. Transcriptomic profiles depending on alkaline pH and SltA function showed that pacC expression might be under SltA regulation. Additional transcriptional studies of PacC and the only pH-regulated pal gene, palF, confirmed both the strong dependence on ambient pH and the function of SltA. The regulation of pacC expression is dependent on the activity of the zinc binuclear (C6) cluster transcription factor PacX. However, we found that the ablation of sltA in the pacX− mutant background specifically prevents the increase in pacC expression levels without affecting PacC protein levels, showing a novel specific function of the PacX factor. The loss of sltA function causes the anomalous proteolytic processing of PacC and a reduction in the post-translational modifications of PalF. At alkaline pH, in a null sltA background, PacC72kDa accumulates, detection of the intermediate PacC53kDa form is extremely low and the final processed form of 27 kDa shows altered electrophoretic mobility. Constitutive ubiquitination of PalF or the presence of alkalinity-mimicking mutations in pacC, such as pacCc14 and pacCc700, resembling PacC53kDa and PacC27kDa, respectively, allowed the normal processing of PacC but did not rescue the alkaline pH-sensitive phenotype caused by the null sltA allele. Overall, data show that Slt and PacC/Pal pathways are interconnected, but the transcription factor SltA is on a higher hierarchical level than PacC on regulating the tolerance to the ambient alkalinity in A. nidulans.
Reference58 articles.
1. Aspergillus nidulans in the post-genomic era: A top-model filamentous fungus for the study of signaling and homeostasis mechanisms;Etxebeste;Int. Microbiol.,2020
2. Stress Adaptation;Brown;Microbiol. Spectr.,2017
3. Caesar, L.K., Kelleher, N.L., and Keller, N.P. (2020). In the fungus where it happens: History and future propelling Aspergillus nidulans as the archetype of natural products research. Fungal Genet. Biol., 144.
4. Ambient pH gene regulation in fungi: Making connections;Tilburn;Trends Microbiol.,2008
5. Fungal responses to reactive oxygen species;Aguirre;Med. Mycol.,2006