Affiliation:
1. Center for Biosystems Research, University of Maryland Biotechnology Institute, College Park, Maryland
Abstract
ABSTRACT
The phenomenon of transmissible hypovirulence (virulence attenuation) associated with biological control of natural populations of the chestnut blight fungus
Cryphonectria parasitica
can be experimentally reproduced by infection with hypovirus cDNA clones (viral hypovirulence) or by mutation of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) in the absence of virus infection (mitochondrial hypovirulence). We now report the use of an established
C. parasitica
cDNA microarray to monitor nuclear transcriptional responses to an mtDNA mutation of
C. parasitica
strain EP155, designated EP155/
mit2
, which was previously shown to induce elevated alternative oxidase activity and hypovirulence (C. B. Monterio-Vitorello, J. A. Bell, D. W. Fulbright, and H. A. Bertrand, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA
92:
5935-5939, 1995). Approximately 10% of the 2,200 genes represented on the microarray exhibited altered transcript accumulation as a result of the
mit2
mtDNA mutation. While genes involved in mitochondrial function were clearly represented in the EP155/
mit2
-responsive gene list, direct parallels to the well-characterized
Saccharomyces cerevisiae
retrograde response to mitochondrial dysfunction were not observed. Remarkably, 47% of the genes that were differentially expressed following the infection of strain EP155 by the prototypic hypovirus CHV1-EP713 had similarly changed transcript accumulation in the virus-free EP155/
mit2
mutant. These results establish a linkage between viral and mitochondrial hypovirulence and raise questions regarding the relationship between hypovirus infection and mitochondrial dysfunction. The combined set of transcriptional profile data provides a foundation for future studies on mitochondrion-to-nucleus communications in the context of hypovirus infection and senescence associated with mitochondrial dysfunction in filamentous fungi.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,General Medicine,Microbiology
Reference28 articles.
1. Use of cDNA Microarrays To Monitor Transcriptional Responses of the Chestnut Blight Fungus
Cryphonectria parasitica
to Infection by Virulence-Attenuating Hypoviruses
2. Specific and Common Alterations in Host Gene Transcript Accumulation following Infection of the Chestnut Blight Fungus by Mild and Severe Hypoviruses
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