Affiliation:
1. Department of Botany and Plant Pathology
2. Department of Biological Sciences, Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana
Abstract
ABSTRACT
A mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase gene,
PMK1
, is known to regulate appressorium formation and infectious hyphal growth in the rice blast fungus
Magnaporthe grisea
. In this study, we constructed a green fluorescent protein gene-
PMK1
fusion (GFP-
PMK1
) to examine the expression and localization of
PMK1
in
M. grisea
during infection-related morphogenesis. The GFP
-PMK1
fusion encoded a functional protein that complemented the defect of the
pmk1
deletion mutant in appressorium formation and plant infection. Although a weak GFP signal was detectable in vegetative hyphae, conidia, and germ tubes, the expression of GFP-Pmk1 was increased in appressoria and developing conidia. Nuclear localization of GFP-Pmk1 proteins was observed in a certain percentage of appressoria. A kinase-inactive allele and a nonphosphorylatable allele of
PMK1
were constructed by site-directed mutagenesis. Expression of these mutant
PMK1
alleles did not complement the
pmk1
deletion mutant. These data confirm that kinase activity and activation of
PMK1
by the upstream MAP kinase kinase are required for appressorium formation and plant infection in
M. grisea
. When overexpressed with the RP27 promoter in the wild-type strain, both the kinase-inactive and nonphosphorylatable
PMK1
fusion proteins caused abnormal germ tube branching. Overexpression of these
PMK1
mutant alleles may interfere with the function of native
PMK1
during appressorium formation.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,General Medicine,Microbiology
Cited by
251 articles.
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