Affiliation:
1. Research Area Gene Technology and Applied Biochemistry, Institute of Chemical Engineering, Vienna University of Technology, Vienna, Austria
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Light is one crucial environmental signal which can determine whether a fungus reproduces asexually or initiates sexual development. Mating in the ascomycete
Hypocrea jecorina
(anamorph
Trichoderma reesei
) occurs preferentially in light. We therefore investigated the relevance of the light response machinery for sexual development in
H. jecorina
. We found that the photoreceptors BLR1 and BLR2 and the light-regulatory protein ENV1 have no effect on male fertility, while ENV1 is essential for female fertility. BLR1 and BLR2 were found to impact fruiting body formation although they are not essential for mating. Quantitative reverse transcription-PCR (qRT-PCR) analyses revealed that BLR1, BLR2, and ENV1 negatively regulate transcript levels of both pheromone receptors as well as peptide pheromone precursors in light but not in darkness and in a mating type-dependent manner. The effect of BLR1 and BLR2 on regulation of pheromone precursor and receptor genes is less severe than that of ENV1 as strains lacking
env1
show 100-fold (for
ppg1
) to more than 100,000-fold (for
hpp1
) increased transcript levels of pheromone precursor genes as well as more than 20-fold increased levels of
hpr1
, the pheromone receptor receiving the HPP1 signal in a MAT1-1 strain. ENV1 likely integrates additional signals besides light, and our results indicate that its function is partially mediated via regulation of
mat1-2-1
. We conclude that ENV1 is essential for balancing the levels of genes regulated in a mating-type-dependent manner, which contributes to determination of sexual identity and fruiting body formation.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,General Medicine,Microbiology
Cited by
47 articles.
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