Affiliation:
1. Genetics Graduate Program, East Lansing, Michigan, USA
2. Department of Plant Biology, East Lansing, Michigan, USA
3. Department of Plant Pathology Michigan State University, East Lansing, Michigan, USA
Abstract
ABSTRACT
The function of Fig1, a transmembrane protein of the low-affinity calcium uptake system (LACS) in fungi, was examined for its role in the growth and development of the plant pathogen
Fusarium graminearum
. The Δ
fig1
mutants failed to produce mature perithecia, and sexual development was halted prior to the formation of perithecium initials. The loss of Fig1 function also resulted in a reduced vegetative growth rate. Macroconidium production was reduced 70-fold in the Δ
fig1
mutants compared to the wild type. The function of the high-affinity calcium uptake system (HACS), comprised of the Ca
2+
channels Mid1 and Cch1, was previously characterized for
F. graminearum
. To better understand the roles of the LACS and the HACS, Δ
fig1
Δ
mid1
, Δ
fig1
Δ
cch1
, and Δ
fig1
Δ
mid1
Δ
cch1
double and triple mutants were generated, and the phenotypes of these mutants were more severe than those of the Δ
fig1
mutants. Pathogenicity on wheat was unaffected for the Δ
fig1
mutants, but the Δ
fig1
Δ
mid1
, Δ
fig1
Δ
cch1
, and Δ
fig1
Δ
mid1
Δ
cch1
mutants, lacking both LACS and HACS functions, had reduced pathogenicity. Additionally, Δ
fig1
mutants of
Neurospora crassa
were examined and did not affect filamentous growth or female fertility in a Δ
fig1
mating type
A
strain, but the Δ
fig1
mating type
a
strain failed to produce fertile fruiting bodies. These results are the first report of Fig1 function in filamentous ascomycetes and expand its role to include complex fruiting body and ascus development.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,General Medicine,Microbiology
Cited by
44 articles.
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