Affiliation:
1. Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, University of Cincinnati College of Medicine, 231 Albert Way, Cincinnati, Ohio 45267-0529
Abstract
ABSTRACT
The Ras family of proteins is a large group of monomeric GTPases. Members of the fungal Ras family act as molecular switches that transduce signals from the outside of the cell to signaling cascades inside the cell.
A. fumigatus
RasA is 94% identical to the essential RasA gene of
Aspergillus nidulans
and is the Ras family member sharing the highest identity to Ras homologs studied in many other fungi. In this study, we report that
rasA
is not essential in
A. fumigatus
, but its absence is associated with slowed germination and a severe defect in radial growth. The Δ
rasA
hyphae were more than two times the diameter of wild-type hyphae, and they displayed repeated changes in the axis of polarity during hyphal growth. The deformed hyphae accumulated numerous nuclei within each hyphal compartment. The Δ
rasA
mutant conidiated poorly, but this phenotype could be ameliorated by growth on osmotically stabilized media. The Δ
rasA
mutant also showed increased susceptibility to cell wall stressors, stained more intensely with calcofluor white, and was refractory to lysing enzymes used to make protoplasts, suggesting an alteration of the cell wall. All phenotypes associated with deletion of
rasA
could be corrected by reinsertion of the wild-type gene. These data demonstrate a crucial role for RasA in both hyphal growth and asexual development in
A. fumigatus
and provide evidence that RasA function is linked to cell wall integrity.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,General Medicine,Microbiology
Cited by
54 articles.
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