PdeH, a High-Affinity cAMP Phosphodiesterase, Is a Key Regulator of Asexual and Pathogenic Differentiation in
Cyclic AMP-dependent pathways mediate the communication between external stimuli and the intracellular signaling machinery, thereby influencing important aspects of cellular growth, morphogenesis and differentiation. Crucial to proper function and robustness of these signaling cascades is the strict regulation and maintenance of intracellular levels of cAMP through a fine balance between biosynthesis (by adenylate cyclases) and hydrolysis (by cAMP phosphodiesterases). We functionally characterized gene-deletion mutants of a high-affinity (PdeH) and a low-affinity (PdeL) cAMP phosphodiesterase in order to gain insights into the spatial and temporal regulation of cAMP signaling in the rice-blast fungus Magnaporthe oryzae. In contrast to the expendable PdeL function, the PdeH activity was found to be a key regulator of asexual and pathogenic development in M. oryzae. Loss of PdeH led to increased accumulation of intracellular cAMP during vegetative and infectious growth. Furthermore, the pdeHΔ showed enhanced conidiation (2–3 fold), precocious appressorial development, loss of surface dependency during pathogenesis, and highly reduced in planta growth and host colonization. A pdeHΔ pdeLΔ mutant showed reduced conidiation, exhibited dramatically increased (∼10 fold) cAMP levels relative to the wild type, and was completely defective in virulence. Exogenous addition of 8-Br-cAMP to the wild type simulated the pdeHΔ defects in conidiation as well as in planta growth and development. While a fully functional GFP-PdeH was cytosolic but associated dynamically with the plasma membrane and vesicular compartments, the GFP-PdeL localized predominantly to the nucleus. Based on data from cAMP measurements and Real-Time RTPCR, we uncover a PdeH-dependent biphasic regulation of cAMP levels during early and late stages of appressorial development in M. oryzae. We propose that PdeH-mediated sustenance and dynamic regulation of cAMP signaling during M. oryzae development is crucial for successful establishment and spread of the blast disease in rice.
Published in the journal:
PdeH, a High-Affinity cAMP Phosphodiesterase, Is a Key Regulator of Asexual and Pathogenic Differentiation in. PLoS Pathog 6(5): e32767. doi:10.1371/journal.ppat.1000897
Category:
Research Article
doi:
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1000897
Summary
Cyclic AMP-dependent pathways mediate the communication between external stimuli and the intracellular signaling machinery, thereby influencing important aspects of cellular growth, morphogenesis and differentiation. Crucial to proper function and robustness of these signaling cascades is the strict regulation and maintenance of intracellular levels of cAMP through a fine balance between biosynthesis (by adenylate cyclases) and hydrolysis (by cAMP phosphodiesterases). We functionally characterized gene-deletion mutants of a high-affinity (PdeH) and a low-affinity (PdeL) cAMP phosphodiesterase in order to gain insights into the spatial and temporal regulation of cAMP signaling in the rice-blast fungus Magnaporthe oryzae. In contrast to the expendable PdeL function, the PdeH activity was found to be a key regulator of asexual and pathogenic development in M. oryzae. Loss of PdeH led to increased accumulation of intracellular cAMP during vegetative and infectious growth. Furthermore, the pdeHΔ showed enhanced conidiation (2–3 fold), precocious appressorial development, loss of surface dependency during pathogenesis, and highly reduced in planta growth and host colonization. A pdeHΔ pdeLΔ mutant showed reduced conidiation, exhibited dramatically increased (∼10 fold) cAMP levels relative to the wild type, and was completely defective in virulence. Exogenous addition of 8-Br-cAMP to the wild type simulated the pdeHΔ defects in conidiation as well as in planta growth and development. While a fully functional GFP-PdeH was cytosolic but associated dynamically with the plasma membrane and vesicular compartments, the GFP-PdeL localized predominantly to the nucleus. Based on data from cAMP measurements and Real-Time RTPCR, we uncover a PdeH-dependent biphasic regulation of cAMP levels during early and late stages of appressorial development in M. oryzae. We propose that PdeH-mediated sustenance and dynamic regulation of cAMP signaling during M. oryzae development is crucial for successful establishment and spread of the blast disease in rice.
Introduction
Heterotrimeric G protein signaling utilizes cyclic AMP (cAMP) as a second messenger, to mediate the transduction of extracellular stimuli to the intracellular downstream signaling components in several eukaryotes, including the pathogenic fungi. The cAMP pathway is a highly conserved signaling module that influences and regulates a range of fundamental cellular processes in growth, development and morphogenesis.
In response to ligand-stimulated GPCRs, spatially segregated “point sources” of cAMP are generated through GαS based activation of membrane anchored adenylyl cyclases. In response to extracellular stimuli, multiple point sources of cAMP are generated throughout the cell, leading to the gradual accumulation and increase in the basal or steady-state levels of cAMP. On attaining a critical threshold concentration, cAMP can further activate several important effectors (foremost being cPKA, a cAMP-dependent Protein Kinase A), which in turn mediate a wide array of downstream physiological effects [1]. The inactivation of cAMP to 5′-AMP is carried out through enzymatic hydrolysis, by phosphodiesterases (PDEs). Such an inactivation of cAMP regulates the overall strength and intensity of the signaling cascade and is also necessary for efficient signal compartmentalization and termination [2], [3]. In order to achieve this, PDEs are targeted to specific intracellular sites or signaling complexes and are known to localize not only to the cytosol, but also to a variety of membrane, nuclear and cytoskeletal locations [4], [5], [6], [7], [8]. In addition, PDEs establish and shape concentration-dependent gradients of cAMP at distinct regions within a cell [9], [10], [11]. Thus, PDEs play an important role in regulating the specificity, amplitude and temporal duration of cAMP signaling [2], [12].
In fungi and yeasts, cAMP signaling cascade has been co-opted for a multitude of cellular processes and development. For example, in yeasts like S. cerevisiae, cAMP regulates nutrient sensing, pseudohyphal differentiation, cell cycle progression and stress signaling [13], [14], [15], [16], [17], [18]. In S. pombe, mating, sporulation and gluconeogenesis are controlled through the cAMP pathway [19], [20], [21], [22]. In pathogenic fungi, such as C. albicans and C. neoformans, cAMP signaling influences sexual differentiation, stress tolerance and several important aspects of virulence [23], [24], [25], [26], [27], [28], [29], [30], [31], [32], [33]. In the plant-pathogenic fungus U. maydis, cAMP governs dimorphic transition in addition to virulence [34], [35], [36], [37], [38]. Morphogenesis, cell polarity and asexual development are regulated through cAMP in N. crassa and A. nidulans [39], [40], [41], [42], [43], [44], [45], [46], [47], [48], [49].
Fluctuations in cAMP levels are modulated by cAMP phosphodiesterases in yeasts (including the dimorphic pathogens) but not in filamentous fungal species. S. cerevisiae contains a low-affinity phosphodiesterase (Pde1; with a high Km towards cAMP) and a high-affinity phosphodiesterase (Pde2; with a low Km towards cAMP) [50], [51], [52], [53]. Pde1 regulates cAMP levels induced by glucose stimulation or intracellular acidification, and is in turn regulated through phosphorylation by cPKA [54], [55], [56].
Pde2 regulates basal or steady state levels of cAMP, in addition to protecting the yeast cells from extracellular cAMP [17], [54], [57]. Although poorly understood, Pde2 regulation is mediated through the cPKA pathway. Neither of the two PDEs is indispensable for cell growth under standard culture conditions but are primarily needed to overcome stress and nutritional starvation [17], [58], [59]. The fission yeast S. pombe, lacks a Pde2 ortholog, but possesses a Pde1 protein, which functions to regulate cAMP levels induced by glucose stimulation in a manner likely dependent on cPKA [21], [60]. A definite role has not yet been assigned to the Pde1 in C. albicans development. However, the C. albicans Pde2 has been functionally well characterized [23], [25], [61]. Similar to the effects caused in S. cerevisiae, deletion of Pde2 leads to elevated levels of intracellular cAMP, increased responsiveness to exogenous cAMP and sensitivity to heat shock [23], [27]. In addition, Pde2 mutant displays defects in cell wall and membrane integrity, and is more sensitive to a range of antifungal agents [24], [25]. Furthermore, the pde2 mutant shows enhanced filamentation but is avirulent in a murine model of systemic Candidiasis [23].
The Pde1 and Pde2 have been functionally characterized in Cryptococcus neoformans, which represents another well-studied human fungal pathogen. Unlike in S. cerevisiae and C. albicans, Pde2 deletion in C. neoformans results in only subtle and mild phenotypic defects. In contrast, Pde1 regulates the basal levels of cAMP but does not respond to cAMP induced in response to glucose induction. However, deletion of PDE1 conferred only mild phenotypic defects. Furthermore, Pde1 activity is regulated through cPKA derived phosphorylation [30].
Mouse strains deficient in PDE activity are viable, but exhibit poor growth, increased prenatal mortality or female infertility [62], [63]. Taken together, the phenotypes displayed by the PDE deletion strains in either fungi or in mammals, imply that, rather than executing a strict regulatory role, PDEs function to modulate and streamline cAMP signaling.
M. oryzae is an ascomycete fungus that causes the blast disease in rice and several other monocot species [64]. It reproduces asexually when stimulated by light, typically producing three to four conidia each on stalk-like structures known as conidiophores [65], [66], [67]. These asexual spores or conidia aid in the spread of the blast disease. Under conditions of high humidity, the asexual spore produces a germ tube which senses and responds to host surface stimuli by forming an infection structure known as an appressorium [68]. In M. oryzae, cAMP signaling is required for conidiation and appressorium initiation [69], [70], [71]. Although an Adenylate cyclase (mac1) function has been shown to be crucial for M. oryzae pathogenesis, key downstream modulators of cAMP signaling are yet to be identified [72]. In this study, we were interested in deciphering the roles of phosphodiesterases in modulating the cAMP levels and signaling during various stages of M. oryzae development. Towards this end, we identified a high- and low-affinity cAMP phosphodiesterase in M. oryzae and further characterized gene-deletion strains of both the cAMP phosphodiesterases. Our results show that PdeH plays an important role in regulating the steady-state levels of cAMP during asexual, pathogenic and invasive growth in M. oryzae. We analyzed the transcriptional regulation and localization of PDEs and demonstrate that cAMP signaling is compartmentalized in M. oryzae and that it responds rapidly to modulate and maintain the appropriate levels of cAMP during growth, development and infection.
Results
Identification of cAMP phosphodiesterases in M. oryzae
Using complete amino acid sequences, we identified orthologs of the yeast Pde1 and Pde2 in M. oryzae (http://www.broadinstitute.org/annotation/genome/magnaporthe_grisea/MultiHome.html). MGG_05664 ORF (GQ869475) was predicted to encode an 893 aa protein, showing 27% identity to Pde2; whereas MGG_07707 (GQ869476) was a 585 aa polypeptide with 32% overall identity to yeast Pde1. The complete cDNA sequence was determined in each instance (Genbank accession GQ869476 and GQ869476, respectively) and the predicted amino acid sequences confirmed. MGG_05664 showed the conserved PDE class I consensus sequence [73] permitting us to designate it as a high-affinity phosphodiesterase (Figure 1A). Based on the conserved PDE class II consensus [30], MGG_07707 was likewise judged to be the low-affinity cAMP phosphodiesterase in M. oryzae (Figure 1B). In order to avoid confusion with Pde1, a P-Type ATPase [74], we hereafter refer to the low-affinity phosphodiesterase as PdeL and the high-affinity phosphodiesterase as PdeH in M. oryzae.
PDEH is necessary for proper aerial hyphal growth
To understand the role of cAMP phosphodiesterases during growth and morphogenesis in M. oryzae, we generated gene-deletion mutants of PDEH and PDEL in the B157 wild type background. Agrobacterium-mediated gene targeting was used to replace the entire ORF of the PDEH or PDEL gene with the hygromycin-resistance (Figure S1A) or the bialaphos-resistance marker cassettes (Figure S1B), respectively. Selected transformants were screened by locus-specific PCR and confirmed by Southern blotting (Figure S1C and S1D). Two independent strains for pdeHΔ and pdeLΔ were used for further investigations.
When grown on Prune agar (PA) medium for 7 days at 28°C, the pdeLΔ was similar to the wild-type strain and showed no obvious defects in aerial or radial growth and colony morphology (Figure 1C). In contrast, the pdeHΔ colony was flat due to reduced aerial hyphal growth, and displayed enhanced pigmentation and marginally slower radial growth at analogous time points (Figure 1C). To further understand the relationship between PDEH and PDEL, we generated a pdeHΔ pdeLΔ double mutant (Figure S1E). Compared to the pdeHΔ, the double deletion mutant showed a flat colony appearance with enhanced pigmentation and severely reduced aerial hyphal growth (Figure 1C and S3A), thus underscoring the importance of proper PdeH and PdeL function in M. oryzae. In addition, radial growth was compromised in the double mutant. Next, we attempted a genetic complementation of pdeHΔ by introducing a full-length PDEH fused to RFP at the N-terminus under native regulation. The complemented pdeHΔ strain showed complete suppression of the aerial and radial growth defects exhibited by the pdeHΔ strain (Figure S2A and 2B), suggesting that the phenotypic defects therein were solely due to the loss of PdeH function. Taken together, these results indicate that PdeH is essential for proper aerial hyphal growth and development in M. oryzae. Furthermore, we infer that PdeL plays only a minor role in regulating vegetative and aerial growth in M. oryzae.
Loss of PdeH Leads to enhanced conidiation
Asexual reproduction commences in M. oryzae with the formation of specialized aerial conidiophores that go on to produce conidia in a sympodial manner [65]. We were particularly curious about the conidiation status of pdeHΔ since it showed reduced aerial growth. Rather surprisingly, conidiation was two to three-fold higher in the pdeHΔ, when compared to pdeLΔ or the wild type (Figure 2A). Furthermore, the pdeHΔ formed 5–8 conidia per conidiophore unlike the wild type conidiophores, which typically produce 3 conidia each (Figure 2C). The pdeLΔ pdeHΔ strain interestingly was severely blocked in conidiation (98±1.0% reduced in conidiation when compared to the wild type) and failed to produce proper conidia and instead formed highly pigmented aberrant structures of varied morphologies (Figure 2A, 2C and S3A) or two celled conidia-like structures at a very low frequency (≤2%; Figure 2C inset and S3C; p<0.05). Next, we quantified conidiophore formation in the above four strains and found that the pdeHΔ produced twice the number of conidiophores per microscopic field, compared to the pdeLΔ or the wild type (Figure 2B). The pdeHΔ pdeLΔ was also defective in conidiophore differentiation, and resulted in highly pigmented structures that were misshapen and failed to grow further and form conidia (Figure 2B, 2C and S3A). The pdeLΔ and the complemented pdeHΔ (RFP-PdeH expressing strain) produced nearly the same number of conidia and conidiophores as the wild type and did not show any apparent defects during any stage of asexual development (Figure 2A and 2B).
Taken together, our results suggest that PdeH regulates multiple aspects of asexual development, primarily influencing conidiophore differentiation and conidia formation. Furthermore, we concur that PdeH function (and by inference cAMP levels) likely determines the pattern and number of conidia formed on conidiophores. Furthermore, we conclude that the simultaneous loss of PDE functions leads to deleterious effects in asexual differentiation in M. oryzae. The inability of the pdeHΔ pdeLΔ to form proper conidiophores and conidia suggests a regulatory albeit ancillary function for PdeL during asexual development.
PdeH regulates intracellular cAMP levels in M. oryzae
In order to assess whether the phenotypic defects in pdeHΔ were due to elevated levels of cAMP, we quantified and compared the steady-state levels of cAMP during the conidiation phase in the pdeHΔ, pdeLΔ, pdeHΔ pdeLΔ and the wild type (Figure 3A). First, we measured cAMP levels in cultures grown in the dark for 3 d and compared it to those in cultures exposed to constant illumination for a period 24 h (after a 3 d incubation in the dark). We found that even in the absence of light stimulation (darkness), the pdeHΔ strain accumulated ∼3 fold (p<0.005) and ∼2.6 fold (p<0.005) higher levels of cAMP, compared to the wild type or the pdeLΔ respectively (Figure 3A). Under similar conditions, the double deletion mutant accumulated ∼3 fold (p<0.001) higher cAMP compared to pdeHΔ and ∼10 fold higher levels compared to the wild type or pdeLΔ (p<0.001).
Furthermore, during conidiation (24 h photo-induced) the cAMP levels were significantly up regulated in all the strains except the double deletion mutant: 2 fold (p<0.05) in the wild type and pdeLΔ, and by 1.4 fold (p<0.01) in the pdeHΔ when compared to the respective dark grown cultures. However, in the pdeHΔ pdeLΔ, the cAMP levels were consistently higher, irrespective of the growth conditions (Figure 3A). Thus, the pdeHΔ pdeLΔ and pdeHΔ mutants accumulate significantly higher levels of cAMP compared to the wild type or pdeLΔ. We thus conclude that PdeH is an important regulator of cAMP signaling during asexual development in the rice blast fungus.
Next, we measured the steady-state levels of cAMP in the pdeHΔ, pdeLΔ and the wild type during pathogenic development (Figure 3B and 3C). The intracellular levels of cAMP could not be estimated reliably during the pathogenic phase of development in the pdeHΔ pdeLΔ strain, as it failed to conidiate properly and the resultant aberrant structures were scarce.
The various developmental stages and time points that we considered for the cAMP measurements were as follows: ungerminated conidia (0 h), appressorium initiation (6 h), mature appressorium (21 h), penetration stage (24 h) and infection hyphae formation stage (28–30 h)[75]. The levels of cAMP were ∼2.5 fold (p<0.005) higher in freshly harvested pdeHΔ conidia when compared to the wild type or the pdeLΔ (Figure 3B). At 6 hours post inoculation (hpi), the aforementioned strains accumulated higher levels of cAMP, but the overall level was significantly higher in the pdeHΔ (1.5 fold; p<0.005). In mature appressoria (21 hpi) the cAMP levels decreased across all the strains, except the pdeHΔ, which sustained a two-fold higher level of cAMP compared to wild type or pdeLΔ (Figure 3B). At 24 hpi, the cAMP levels decreased further by two-fold across all the strains with the exception of the pdeHΔ, which continued to accumulate elevated cAMP levels. At the stage of host penetration (24–30 hpi), the pdeHΔ maintained comparatively high cAMP levels (2 to 5 fold; Figure 3C) unlike the wild type or pdeLΔ. We therefore infer that the overall steady-state levels of cAMP are regulated in two distinct phases in M. oryzae: upregulated during the early stages (appressorium initiation and formation), while being down regulated at the late stages (host invasion) of pathogenic development.
We thus conclude that PdeH-based regulation helps maintain functionally relevant levels of cAMP during infection-related morphogenesis. We propose a minor role for PdeL in regulating cAMP levels in M. oryzae. However, based on the cAMP levels observed in the pdeHΔ pdeLΔ and the pdeHΔ, we suggest that PdeL function likely gains more importance in the absence of PdeH.
PdeH and surface dependency during appressorium formation
Inductive surface cues such as hardness and hydrophobicity, which naturally prevail on leaves, can be mimicked using artificial membranes (GelBond, Lonza Walkersville Inc., USA) for in vitro appressorial assays. The wild type is incapable of appressoria formation on non-inductive surfaces, but can do so only in the presence of exogenous cAMP or inhibitors of cAMP phosphodiesterases, suggesting that increased levels of cAMP may play a fundamental role in initiating early signaling events in appressorium formation [69]. Therefore, we asked whether elevated cAMP could influence precocious initiation of pathogenic development in the pdeHΔ. We quantified the efficiency of appressorium formation on inductive or non-inductive surface in the pdeHΔ, pdeLΔ and the wild type. The pdeHΔ elaborated appressoria on inductive (90±2.1%; Figure 4A and 4B) as well as on non-inductive surfaces (66±2.0%; Figure 4A and 4B), with a reasonably high frequency. In contrast, the wild type or the pdeLΔ conidia could form appressoria on inductive surface (75–80%), but failed to do so on non-inductive surface (4–7%; Figure 4A and 4B). Thus, the pdeLΔ behaves similar to the wild type and required proper inductive cues for pathogenic development. The two-celled conidia from the pdeHΔ pdeLΔ elaborated appressoria on inductive (Figure S3C) and non-inductive surfaces, however comparable quantifications were not possible due to the very low numbers of such structures formed. We thereby infer that the increased levels of intrinsic cAMP in the pdeHΔ are likely sufficient to uncouple surface dependency from pathogenic differentiation in M. oryzae.
Interestingly, we observed that a significant number of pdeHΔ conidia formed germ tubes that were extremely short or barely visible, prior to appressorium initiation. We scored and systematically classified the lengths of the germ tubes into three categories: short (short or barely visible), normal (equal to the length of the conidium) or long (longer than the conidium) prior to appressorium formation. We found that nearly 45±1.0% of the pdeHΔ conidia produced extremely short germ tubes prior to appressorium formation (Figure 4A; arrows), versus 25±1.8% in pdeLΔ strain and 13±1.7% in the wild type. Nearly 49±1.7% of the pdeHΔ conidia formed germ tubes of normal length, versus 69±2.3% in pdeLΔ and 74±2.2% in the wild type. Long germ tubes were seen in 6±1.7% of pdeHΔ compared to 6±2.0% and 13±1.8% in pdeLΔ and wild type conidia respectively. Based on the above results, we construe that PdeH influences surface sensing and guides germ tube growth during the early stages of infection-related morphogenesis in M. oryzae.
PdeH negatively regulates appressorial development and maturation
We observed that the loss of PdeH derails cAMP-associated surface signaling and significantly accelerated appressorium formation. Time-course analysis revealed that pdeHΔ is significantly advanced in all stages of pathogenic development. On inductive surfaces, the wild type conidia underwent germ tube hooking at 3–4 hpi (Figure 5; white arrow), followed by tip swelling and growth into an immature appressoria by 5–6 hpi. By 8 hpi, the wild type formed melanized appressoria (Figure 5; black arrow). Under identical conditions, the pdeHΔ conidia initiated germ tube hooking as early as 2 hpi (Figure 5; white arrow), formed immature appressoria by 3–4 hours and finally melanized appressoria in about 5 hours (Figure 5; black arrow). Thus, the pdeHΔ not only initiated appressoria earlier but also formed melanized appressoria more rapidly, at least 3 h in advance compared to the wild type. The pdeLΔ behaved similar to the wild type taking about 8 hours to form melanized appressoria. Our findings suggest that precocious elevated cAMP levels can disrupt the temporal regulation of the processes that lead to proper initiation, development and maturation of appressoria in M. oryzae.
In M. oryzae, nuclear division or mitosis has been shown to precede appressorium formation, and arresting DNA replication or mitotic entry prevents appressorium formation [76]. Considering that a majority of pdeHΔ conidia precociously formed appressoria on inductive surfaces, we were interested in the mitotic status of the nuclei in pdeHΔ at different stages of pathogenic development. In wild type, mitosis generally occurred between 5–6 hpi, followed by migration of a daughter nucleus into the developing appressorium (Figure S4A). Interestingly, appressorial morphogenesis progressed rapidly and independent of nuclear division up to 3 hpi in the pdeHΔ conidia (Figure S4B; white arrows). By 4 hpi, mitosis generally occurred in the nucleus at the junction of the terminal cell of the conidium and the developing appressorium, followed by migration of a of the daughter nucleus into the maturing appressorium (Figure S4B; asterisk). We thus infer that elevated cAMP levels likely result in appressorial morphogenesis prior to nuclear division in the germinating pdeHΔ conidia.
PdeH is required for pathogenesis in M. oryzae
In order to assess the ability to cause blast disease, we spray inoculated three-week old rice seedlings (variety CO39) with conidia from pdeHΔ or pdeLΔ strain. The wild type served as a positive control, and disease symptoms were evaluated nine days post inoculation. Rice seedlings inoculated with the wild type or pdeLΔ conidia showed numerous typical spindle-like, gray centered lesions that merged into one another. On the other hand, pdeHΔ conidia failed to infect the host efficiently and to cause typical blast lesions. Instead, the pdeHΔ formed minute brown speckles (Figure 6) that failed to coalesce and resembled the hypersensitive response (HR) seen on a moderately resistant host plant.
Barley leaf explants inoculated with various dilutions of wild-type or pdeLΔ conidia developed typical blast symptoms comprising spindle-shaped lesions with gray centers (Figure 6). Under similar conditions, pdeHΔ conidia failed to cause comparable disease symptoms at all conidial dilutions tested (Figure 6). Next, we tested if the aberrant structures formed by pdeHΔ pdeLΔ during the conidiation phase could cause disease on barley explants. Equivalent numbers of conidia from the wild type were used as control in parallel. The double deletion mutant failed to cause any disease symptoms on the inoculated leaves, unlike the wild type that displayed typical disease lesions (Figure S3B). The complemented pdeHΔ (RFP-PdeH expressing strain) was found to be as virulent as the wild type or the pdeLΔ on barley (Figure S2C).
Based on the disease assays on rice and barley, we conclude that PdeH (and by inference cAMP levels) is an important regulator of pathogenesis and disease severity during M. oryzae host interactions.
The cAMP pathway regulates in planta growth and development of M. oryzae
Although, the pdeHΔ could efficiently form appressoria (∼90%) on rice and barley leaves, it failed to establish proper blast disease. Hence, we investigated the in planta development and quantified the host penetration ability of each strain (as judged by aniline blue staining for papillary callose deposits) of pdeHΔ in comparison to the wild type and pdeLΔ on barley leaves. At 22 hpi, only 3±0.8% of the wild type appressoria formed penetration pegs compared to 10±1.2% in case of the pdeHΔ strain, indicating a significant advancement (p<0.005) in the ability of the pdeHΔ appressoria to generate penetration pegs (Figure 7A). At 24 hpi, 75±2.8% of the wild type and 73±3.8% of pdeHΔ appressoria formed penetration pegs. As is evident from the graphs in Figure 7A, 90±5.0% of the wild type penetration pegs proceeded to form infection hyphae at 36 hpi. In contrast, only 14±1.7% of the penetration pegs developed into infection hyphae in pdeHΔ. These observations suggest that the pdeHΔ is not defective in host penetration, but shows severe reduction in differentiating infection hyphae. Further observations (48 hpi) revealed that 35±3.6% of pdeHΔ and 85±3.2% of the wild type penetration pegs advanced to form infection hyphae (Figure 7A). Furthermore, the pdeHΔ infection hyphae were significantly reduced in their in planta growth and colonization, with a majority being restricted to the first invaded cell (Figure 7B). In contrast, infection hyphae elaborated by the wild type achieved cross-wall penetration and spread. The pdeLΔ strain behaved in a manner similar to the wild type at all the time points tested (Figure 7B). The aberrant structures formed by pdeHΔ pdeLΔ during the conidiation phase failed to germinate and form appressoria even after 72 hpi, and as a consequence did not elicit any response from the host (Figure S3D). Interestingly, the two-celled conidia formed by the double deletion mutant successfully penetrated the host tissue as early as 22 hpi (Figure S3E). Further observations at 36, 48 and 72 hpi revealed that the double deletion mutant was blocked at the penetration stage, and failed completely to elaborate infection hyphae (Figure S3D and 3E).
These results indicate that the primary reason for the failure of the pdeHΔ to cause typical blast lesions is due to its compromised ability to form proper infection hyphae and to further advance its growth and spread in the host tissue. We thus hypothesize that PdeH-dependent regulation of cAMP signaling is key to successful host colonization by M. oryzae.
Transcriptional regulation of PDEH and PDEL
In M. oryzae, cAMP signaling is known to regulate appressorium initiation and development [69], [71]. Extensive work carried out on PDEs in mammalian cells and in Dictyostelium, has described the existence of feedback loops (positive and negative) between varying cAMP levels and PDE gene expression [77], [78]. We were interested in elucidating if PDE transcripts were differentially regulated in response to fluctuating cAMP levels during pathogenic development in M. oryzae. Quantative Real-Time RTPCR analysis was used to measure the PDE transcript levels during different developmental stages during infection. The time points and tissues used were 0 h (freshly harvested conidia), 3 h (conidial germination and growth) and 6 h (appressorium initials). In addition, we also performed Real-Time RTPCR analysis on inoculated barley leaves at different stages of in planta growth. We included MGG_04795 (BAS1) as a positive control, since it has been shown to be highly upregulated during infection [79]. Comparative analysis of the Real-Time RTPCR data showed that PDEH transcript levels were significantly down regulated during the early stages of pathogenic development at 3 h (2.5 fold) and at 6 h (2 fold) compared to freshly harvested wild-type conidia (Figure 8A). A similar trend of reduction, 1.4 fold at 3 h and 2.5 fold at 6 h, was evident for the PDEL transcript. Compared to the 21 h time point, the PDEH transcript levels were consistently higher across all other time points tested: 1.5 fold at 24 h, 3 fold at 29 h and 5 fold at 48 h (Figure 8B). However, the levels of PDEL transcript did not show significant changes at similar time points. This suggests that the PDEH transcript levels are differentially regulated during early as well as the late stages of pathogenic differentiation in M. oryzae, likely in response to the varying cAMP levels at these stages of development.
PDEL transcript is differentially regulated in the pdeHΔ mutant
We measured the levels of the PDEL transcript in pdeHΔ during pathogenic development. Conversely, the PDEH transcript levels were assessed in the pdeLΔ background. We used similar time points and fungal cell types as in the previous RTPCR experiment. PDEH transcript levels in the pdeLΔ were comparable to those in the wild type (Figure 8C and previous experiment). At the early stage, the PDEH transcript was down regulated in both the wild type and pdeLΔ strains (2 fold at 3 h and 2.5 fold at 6 h) and at the late stage, the PDEH transcript was upregulated: 2 fold at 24 h and 5 fold at 48 h (Figure 8C). However, compared to its levels in the wild type, the PDEL transcript were notably abundant in the pdeHΔ, during the early as well as the late stages of pathogenic development, across all time points and conditions tested (Figure 8D). We postulate that PDEH (and by inference PdeHp function) may be more responsive to even small changes in the levels of cAMP, whereas PDEL (and likely PdeL activity) likely responds to substantially elevated levels of cAMP, such as those prevalent in the pdeHΔ strain.
Exogenous cAMP or IBMX simulates pdeHΔ-like defects in the wild type
Our results showed that the loss of PdeH function leads to higher basal levels of intracellular cAMP, thus affecting various aspects of asexual and pathogenic development. Therefore, we addressed whether exogenous addition of cAMP (8-Br-cAMP) or IBMX to the wild type would mimic the pdeHΔ defects. 8-Br-cAMP (a membrane permeable variant of cAMP) or IBMX (a phosphodiesterase inhibitor) have been extensively used in various studies to artificially cause the enhancement of endogenous cAMP levels [69], [71], [80], [81]. As shown in Figure 9A, wild type cultures grown in the presence of 8-Br-cAMP or IBMX showed a visible reduction in aerial hyphal growth, a defect reminiscent of the pdeHΔ strain.
We further explored if addition of 8-Br-cAMP to the wild type would enhance conidiation therein. Wild type cultures were initially grown in the dark for 2 d in the presence of 8-Br-cAMP and later exposed to constant illumination for a period of 7 d prior to quantification of conidia. An untreated wild type and pdeHΔ served as controls. Compared to the untreated control, wild type treated with 10 mM 8-Br-cAMP showed a marginal increase in conidial numbers; however 50 mM 8-Br-cAMP treatment evoked a 1.6 fold (p≤0.01) increase in conidia production (Figure 9B). This increase in conidiation although considerable, was not as high (2.3 fold; p<0.005) as exhibited by the pdeHΔ.
Furthermore, barley explants inoculated with wild-type conidia in the presence of 8-Br-cAMP showed a dose-dependent reduction in lesion size and lacked disease severity when compared to the control inoculations (Figure 9C). In contrast to the reduced lesion size and disease progression caused by 10 mM 8-Br-cAMP, the wild type conidia treated with 2.5 mM IBMX showed absolutely no disease symptoms on barley explants (Figure 9C). About 75±4.0% of 8-Br-cAMP-treated wild type appressoria successfully formed penetration pegs at 24 hpi; however by 36 hpi only 40±3.4% of the penetration pegs further developed into infection hyphae. By 48 hpi the number of infection hyphae formed increased to 47±3.0% (Figure 9D and 9F). At the corresponding time point, 90±3.6% penetration pegs formed by the control untreated sample had developed into infection hyphae (Figure 9E and 9F). IBMX-treated wild-type conidia formed appressoria efficiently on leaf tissues, but failed to elaborate penetration pegs even after 36 hpi. At 72 hpi, unlike the 8-Br-cAMP treated wild type, which elaborated infection hyphae, the IBMX-treated wild type failed to develop infection hyphae (Figure 9F).
Thus, 8-Br-cAMP- or IBMX-treated wild type significantly mimicked the pdeHΔ defects in aerial growth, conidiation, disease development and severity. These results support our previous experimental observations and our hypothesis that the defects exhibited by the pdeHΔ strain are indeed due to enhanced basal levels of cAMP, caused due to the loss of PdeH function in M. oryzae.
Subcellular distribution of RFP-PdeH
We expressed an RFP-PDEH translational fusion construct in the pdeHΔ strain to track the subcellular localization and understand the spatial and temporal regulation of PdeH. This strategy was aimed at fluorescently tagging PdeH and to serve as a complementation tool that could potentially suppress the defects exhibited by pdeHΔ strain (Figure S2A and S2B).
Quantifications revealed that the number of conidiophores and conidia produced by the RFP-PDEH expressing pdeHΔ strain was comparable to the wild type (Comp pdeHΔ, Figure 2B). The RFP-PDEH strain lost the ability to elaborate appressoria on non-inductive surfaces. Infection assays showed that, unlike the pdeHΔ, the RFP-PDEH expressing strain had regained the ability to efficiently infect barley leaf explants at various spore concentrations tested (Figure S2C). These results indicate that the RFP-PdeH fusion protein was indeed functional and able to significantly suppress the pdeHΔ defects in conidiation and pathogenesis.
The expression and localization of RFP-PdeH was then examined at different stages of asexual and pathogenic development. Vegetative hyphae and developing conidiophores showed a predominantly weak cytosolic distribution of RFP-PdeH (Figure 10A and 10B). Next, we looked at the distribution of RFP-PdeH at different stages of pathogenic development (Figure 10C). Conidia were harvested from the RFP-PDEH strain, inoculated on plastic cover slips and observed using epifluorescence microscopy. In freshly harvested conidia (0 h), RFP-PdeH localized as cytosolic punctae mostly in the terminal cell of the conidium. At 2 hpi, RFP-PdeH foci were predominant in the terminal cell as well as in the developing germ tube (Figure 10C; arrow). After 4 hpi, RFP-PdeH sustained its distinct punctate localization throughout the terminal cell of the conidium and the germ tube. Furthermore, there was a notable signal although weak, from the rim of the hooking germ tube, indicating a probable association with the plasma membrane (Figure 10C; arrow). The RFP-PdeH signal was weak and indiscernible in the conidia at 6 hpi and 8 hpi, but localized as randomly distributed punctae throughout the developing appressorium, and also showed a possibly weak association with the appressorial membrane. We excluded the possibility that the membrane localization was an artifact of melanization, since tricyclazole treated RFP-PdeH appressoria retained the weak association with the plasma membrane in addition to the distinct cytosolic punctae. (Figure S5A; arrows). In mature melanized appressoria (21 hpi; Figure 10C), the RFP-PdeH displayed a predominantly vacuolar localization. The RFP-PdeH was uniformly distributed through out the cytosol in the infection hyphae within the rice leaf sheath at 36 hpi (Figure 10D). Thus, RFP-PdeH displays a predominantly cytosolic distribution during asexual differentiation, whereas it localizes as distinct cytosolic foci, (and weakly to the plasma membrane of the germ tubes) during pathogenic development. RFP-PdeH was uniformly distributed throughout the cytosol in the infection hyphae during the biotrophic phase.
Subcellular distribution of PROMpg1-GFP-PdeH and PROMpg1-GFP-PdeL
In order to better visualize the intracellular distribution and dynamics of PdeH, we expressed a GFP-PDEH translational fusion construct driven by the MPG1 promoter [82] in the pdeHΔ strain. Similarly, we generated a strain expressing GFP-PdeL fusion protein under the MPG1 promoter. We examined the expression and localization patterns of the PROMpg1-GFP-PdeH fusion protein during different stages of asexual and pathogenic development. Compared to the weak RFP-PdeH signal, the PROMpg1-GFP-PdeH showed a relatively strong cytoplasmic signal in the vegetative mycelia (Figure 11A). During asexual development, the GFP-PdeH fusion protein was predominantly cytosolic (Figure 11B), a pattern comparable to that displayed by the RFP-PdeH strain at a similar stage of development. To gain further insight into the dynamics, we made time-lapse observations of the PROMpg1-GFP-PdeH at different stages of pathogenic development encompassing the following time points: 2–3 hpi (conidial germination; Video S1 and Figure 11C), 4–5 hpi (hooking stage; Video S2 and Figure 11D), and 6–7 hpi (appressorium development; Video S3 and Figure 11E). Time-lapse analysis revealed that the GFP-PdeH fusion protein was associated with vesicular structures, which were highly dynamic and mobile (Video S1 and Figure 11C). Furthermore, co-staining with a nuclear dye (Hoechst 33342) confirmed a peri- and extra- nuclear localization of the GFP-PdeH foci (Figure S5B). At 4–5 hpi, GFP-PdeH localized to regions of the plasma membrane of the hooking germ tube in addition to being associated with highly mobile vesicles shuttling between the conidium and the germ tube (Video S2 and Figure 11D). In addition, GFP-PdeH was vesicular and enriched at the plasma membrane of the appressorium at 6 hpi (Video S3 and Figure 11E).
Next, we examined the subcellular distribution of the PROMpg1-GFP-PdeL fusion protein in M. oryzae. Rather surprisingly, at all the stages of asexual and pathogenic development the GFP-PdeL localized predominantly to the nucleus (Figure 12A to 12F). The nuclear destination of GFP-PdeL was confirmed by co-staining with DAPI (Figure 12D and 12E). Thus, the predominant compartmentalization of PdeH within the cytosol (including the vesicular and plasma membrane localization) and of PdeL in the nucleus suggests that the high- and low-affinity PDEs differentially regulate and likely modulate distinct intracellular pools of cAMP. In summary, our results strongly suggest that appropriate and timely modulation of cAMP signaling, mainly by the PdeH, is critical for regulating the disease causing ability, as well as several important aspects of asexual development in M. oryzae.
Discussion
Upon perception of light, the aerial hyphae of the rice-blast fungus M. oryzae, enter the asexual differentiation pathway to form conidiophores, which ultimately produce 3–4 conidia, each, in a sympodial manner [65], [67], [83], [84]. The pattern and number of conidia produced per conidiophore is highly regulated and important for proper conidial function [67], [71], [84]. Heterotrimeric G proteins and cAMP signaling have been shown to be important regulators of asexual development in M. oryzae [71], [85], [86] and several other filamentous fungi such as Aspergillus, Cryphonectria, Neurospora [44], [87], [88], [89], [90], [91]. The cAMP signaling is also a key regulator of the pathogenic differentiation in M. oryzae [71], [81], [85], [92], [93]. The cAMP PDEs constitute a large family of enzymes that hydrolyse cAMP and provide the sole means of inactivating this important second messenger in eukaryotic cells. In addition, PDEs function to regulate the specificity, intensity and temporal duration of cAMP signaling [2], [4], [94], [95], [96], [97], [98].
While a functional role for the high- and low-affinity PDEs in filamentous fungi such as Neurospora or Aspergillus has not yet been defined, our preliminary analysis does indicate that these fungi do possess PDE orthologs (Figure 1A and 1B) with the conserved consensus sequences typical of both the variants. However, specific roles have been defined for cAMP signaling in C. albicans and C. neoformans, representing the dimorphic or pseudo-filamentous fungi. In addition to regulating the development of hyphal cell wall and membrane structures, the high-affinity PDE in C. albicans has been shown to regulate intracellular levels of cAMP during stress conditions and virulence. However, a role for the low-affinity PDE has not yet been established [23], [24], [25], [27], [61], [99]. Rather surprisingly, a reversal in function has been suggested for the PDEs in C. neoformans, wherein the low-affinity PDE modulates the cAMP signaling [30]. In the present study, we investigated the implications of PDE-based regulation of the intracellular cAMP during asexual and pathogenic development in M. oryzae. We analyzed in detail the effects of gene-deletion of the two cAMP phosphodiesterase-encoding genes PDEH and PDEL (either independently or in combination). Our data suggests unique and non-redundant roles/functions for PdeH and PdeL; but underscores the overall importance of PdeH as a critical regulator of cAMP signaling in M. oryzae. Furthermore, PdeH and PdeL appear to be differentially compartmentalized: PdeL being predominantly nuclear while PdeH is largely cytosolic but confined to perinuclear regions as vesicular foci during conidial germination and to the developing appressorial membrane during the later stages of infection-related morphogenesis. Such an association of a PDE to membranous regions around the nucleus, has been demonstrated through fractionation studies in yeast [100].
Unlike PdeL, which we found to be dispensable for asexual development and virulence in M. oryzae, PdeH was a key regulator of cAMP levels during these two important phases of growth. This suggests that PdeH is able to compensate for the loss of PdeL. However, simultaneous loss of both PDEs was deleterious to proper growth and asexual development, suggesting that above a particular threshold, excess cAMP is detrimental.
Our results further suggest that PdeH regulates cAMP signaling at two critical steps during M. oryzae pathogenesis namely: infection-structure formation and host invasion. This hypothesis is based on the direct assessment of cAMP levels, at the initial (increased) and final (decreased) stages of infection in the wild type and the PDE mutant strains of M. oryzae. An initial increase in cAMP [69], [71] is a likely consequence of a concomitant decrease in PDEH transcript levels during the early phase of appressorium formation. Such a decrease in PDE function could also be a consequence of post-translational modifications (as demonstrated in yeast and various mammalian isoforms [2], [12], [30], [54], [94]) and/or the dynamic recycling of the PdeH-containing multivesicular foci away from the active growth or signaling zones in the germ tube tips. Nonetheless, the down-regulation of cAMP at appressorium maturity is extremely important since it has a strong bearing on successful colonization of host tissue by M. oryzae. We demonstrate that higher levels of exogenous cAMP retard in planta development in the wild type at the late stages of infection, a phenotype reminiscent of the loss of PdeH function during rice-blast disease. On the contrary, increased intracellular cAMP levels (pdeHΔ or exogenous addition) enhance asexual development in M. oryzae. However, there appears to be a threshold and dose-dependent response to high cAMP, since loss of both PDEs (simultaneous) led to aberrant fungal structures and a complete cessation of proper conidiation. The genetic data and biochemical analysis presented here support the model that PdeH (like Rgs1, Regulator of G protein Signaling [71]), negatively affects the cAMP signaling in M. oryzae.
We show that overall cAMP levels are not significantly affected in the pdeLΔ either during conidia or appressoria formation, and that PdeH is the major hydrolyzing enzyme to control the baseline levels of cAMP in these important cell types. However, taking into consideration the phenotype and the elevated cAMP levels in the double deletion mutant, it is possible that PdeL gains importance under conditions when the intracellular levels of cAMP are very high, like in the pdeHΔ strain. We propose that PdeH may not be directly involved in cell shape and morphogenesis, but that the pdeHΔ phenotype is brought about by the inappropriate or untimely activation of signaling through cAMP accumulation. For instance, majority of the pdeHΔ appressoria were initiated without any discernable germ tube emergence or extension from the terminal cells of the conidia. It is tempting to speculate that cAMP signaling is involved in cessation of germ tube growth prior to initiating the hooking stage important for appressorium initiation. Our preliminary data (Figure S4) also suggests that increased cAMP levels likely override the requirement for nuclear division prior to initiation of appressoria. However, additional experiments are required to further investigate the relevance of the pdeHΔ defects in understanding infection-related morphogenesis in conjunction with cell cycle progression in the rice-blast fungus. It is plausible that PdeL activity likely responds to enriched gradients or pools of cAMP present in the nucleus, as has been suggested by Huston.E et al [101].
Furthermore, the principles of compartmentalized cAMP signaling may well apply to highly polarized cell types in M. oryzae, namely conidia, appressoria and infection hyphae, wherein relevant changes in cAMP levels may be controlled in space and time and could be anchored within subcellular compartments such as the nucleus or the outer membranes. It is also possible that the M. oryzae adenylate cyclase (mac1) [72], does not produce cAMP constitutively but only in small bursts confined to the active growth and signaling zones, in response to inductive stimuli.
Our data indicates that cell signaling in M. oryzae responds to rapid albeit small changes in cAMP levels, since loss of PdeH leads to increased accumulation of intracellular cAMP. Furthermore, our findings clearly establish that the overall modulation of the non-nuclear cytosolic pools of cAMP by the high-affinity phosphodiesterase at two distinct phases (up-regulation during early stages and down-regulation during the late stages) is vital for proper pathogenic and infectious development in M. oryzae. We do not rule out dynamic fluctuations (albeit minor) of cAMP within these two major stages of pathogenic differentiation. Furthermore, it is possible that the reduced in planta growth of the pdeHΔ in M. oryzae is a likely consequence of the increased sensitivity towards stress conditions encountered within the host plant. For instance, the cAMP pathway is a major regulator of stress signaling in Candida and the pde2Δ mutant is more sensitive to stress, particularly peroxide and cadmium [99]. Future experiments would address the issues related to associations (if any) between stress signaling and cAMP levels in M. oryzae.
Materials and Methods
Fungal strains and growth conditions
The wild type M.oryzae strain, B157, was obtained from the Directorate of Rice Research (Hyderabad, India). M. oryzae strains were cultured either on Prune agar medium at 28°C (PA; per liter: 40 mL prune juice, 2.5 g lactose, 2.5 g sucrose, 1 g yeast extract, and 20 g agar) or Complete medium (CM; per liter: 0.6% yeast extract, 0.6% casein hydrolysate, and 1% sucrose). Either CM agar (for hygromycin selection) or Basal Medium (BM; per liter: Yeast nitrogen base without amino acids 1.6 g, asparagine 2 g, glucose 10 g, NH4 NO3 1 g, and 20 g of agar, for ammonium glufosinate selection) was used for the selection of fungal transformants. To assess the growth and colony characteristics, wild type as well as the deletion strains were cultivated on PA medium at 28°C for one week. For quantitative analysis of conidiation, fungal strains were cultivated on PA medium in the dark for a day, followed by incubation under constant illumination for 7 d at room temperature. Mycelia used for genomic DNA or total RNA extraction were harvested from cultures grown in liquid for 2–3 days at 28°C as described [102].
Appressorial assays and pathogenicity tests
Conidia were harvested by scraping the surface of the colonies with inoculation loops in the presence of sterile water, and the fungal biomass collected in Falcon tubes (BD Biosciences, USA). The suspension was vortexed for a minute to ensure complete detachment of conidia from the mycelia, and then filtered through two layers of Miracloth (Calbiochem, San Diego, USA). The conidia were pelleted by centrifugation at 3000 rpm for 15 minutes at room temperature. The conidial pellet thus obtained was washed twice and re-suspended in sterile water. The radius of the colony was initially measured to calculate the surface area of the colony. Conidia produced by a given colony were quantified using a hemocytometer and reported as the total number of conidia present per unit area of the colony.
For appressorial assays, the harvested conidia were re-suspended at 105 conidia per mL in sterile water. Droplets (20 µl) of conidial suspension were placed on plastic cover slips or hydrophilic side of GelBond membrane (Lonza Walkersville Inc., USA) and incubated under humid conditions at room temperature. The total number of appressoria was quantified after 16 h. Microscopic observations were made using an Olympus BX51 epifluorescence compound microscope with bright field optics. For pathogenicity assays and assessment of blast lesions, a dilution series of the conidial suspension was inoculated on detached barley leaves, and incubated for 7–9 days in a growth chamber (22°C, 16 h light/8 h dark). Spray inoculations on rice cultivars were conducted as previously described [103]. For host penetration assays, conidial suspensions in sterile water were inoculated on barley leaf explants and assessed after 22 h, 24 h, 36 h and 48 h. Penetration pegs and infection hyphae were detected by staining for papillary callose deposits using Aniline blue[104]. Fungal structures were stained with acid fuchsin as described [74]. Given their lack of sufficient numbers, we could not carry out spray inoculations of the rice seedlings with the aberrant structures formed by the double deletion mutant (during the conidiation phase). However barley infection assays were carried out with pdeHΔ pdeLΔ with a conidial load normalized to at least 50 two-celled conidia-like structures per droplet. A parallel wild type control with equivalent conidial load was included.
The cyclic AMP analog, 8-Br-cAMP (BioLog, Germany) was first added at 0 h and again supplemented after 20 hpi (a final concentration of 10 mM or 50 mM). Stock solutions of 8-Br-cAMP (100 mM) were made in water, while IBMX (25 mM) (Sigma Aldrich, USA) was dissolved in 99% ethanol [71], [80]. For tricyclazole (Cluzeau Info Labo, France) treatment, conidia from the requisite strain were inoculated on cover slips in the presence of 8 µg/mL tricyclazole [105]. Nuclear staining was carried out using DAPI (diamidino-2-phenylindole; Sigma Aldrich, USA) essentially as described [106], although with minor modifications to suit M. oryzae conidia or germlings. Freshly harvested conidia were appropriately diluted and inoculated on hydrophobic plastic cover slips in a moist chamber at room temperature (RT) for 1–2 hours. The cover slips with the adherent germlings were then fixed with formaldehyde (3.7% final concentration), for 5–10 minutes at RT. The fixed samples were then washed gently with distilled water, prior to treatment with Triton X-100 (0.1% final concentration) for 1 minute at RT. The samples were washed thrice with distilled water, and finally incubated in the dark for 10–15 minutes, with a solution of DAPI dissolved in water at a final concentration of 1 µg/ml, and visualized using the Olympus BX51 epifluorescence microscope. Nuclear staining during live imaging of GFP-PdeH was achieved using Hoechst 33342 (Sigma Aldrich, USA) at a concentration of 1 µg/ml (in water) for 20 minutes. Cell wall and septa were stained using calcofluor white in water at a final concentration of 10 µg/ml. Samples were washed twice with sterile distilled water prior to visualization by epifluorescence imaging using the Olympus IX71 microscope.
Nucleic acid related methods
Standard molecular manipulations were performed as described [107]. Fungal genomic DNA was extracted using Master Pure Yeast DNA purification kit (Epicenter Biotechnologies). Plasmid DNA was isolated with Geneaid High Speed Plasmid Mini kits. Homology searches of DNA/protein sequences were performed using the BLAST program [108] and multiple sequence alignments carried out with ClustalW [109] and Boxshade (http://bioweb.pasteur.fr/seqanal/interfaces/boxshade.html).
Gene deletion and complementation analysis
Deletion mutants of PDEH (NCBI accession XP_360290) or PDEL (NCBI accession XP_367803) were generated using the standard one-step gene replacement strategy. Genomic DNA fragments (about 1 kb each) representing the 5′ and 3′ UTR of PDEH (MGG_05665) gene were amplified by PCR, ligated sequentially to flank the hygromycin phosphotransferase gene (HPH1) cassette, in pFGL44, to obtain pFGLpdeHKO. The following primers were used to amplify the 5′and 3′ UTR of the PDEH gene: PDEH-5F (5′- CAGAGAGAATTCAGCACCAGCATGGCACCACTATC), PDEH-5R (5′- CAGAGATCTAGACAAAGAGCGTCCAGTCATAAGACT), PDEH-3F (5′- CAGAGACTGCAGGTTCAGTACTACTGTTCACTCAGAT), PDEH-3R (5′- CAGAGAAAGCTTACGCATTACCCAATGTTGGCATC). pFGLpdeLKO was obtained by amplifying approximately one kb fragments of genomic DNA corresponding to the 5′ and 3′ UTR of PDEL (MGG_07707). The PCR fragments obtained were cloned in pFGL97 to flank the bialaphos resistance gene cassette (BAR). The 5′ UTR was amplified using the following primer pairs: PDEL-5F (5′CAGAGAGGTACCCCGTTTGCTACCTGTGGCCAACG), PDEL-5R (5′- CAGAGAGGATCCCCGCCCGTCCCGTCTAGCCCAGCTGGGCT); The 3′ UTR was amplified using the following primer pairs PDEL-3F (5′- CAGAGACTGCAGTGCGACCCTATGACAGTCCCCT), PDEL-3R (5′- CAGAGAAAGCTTGAGGCCGCCAATGCCACGAGCGC). Underlined text in the primer sequences represents the restriction enzyme sites used for cloning purposes. The sequences of pFGLpdeHKO as well as the pFGLpdeLKO gene replacement constructs was confirmed and the plasmids were introduced into wild type B157 strain via Agrobacterium T-DNA-mediated transformation to specifically replace the PDEH or PDEL genes with HPH1 or BAR respectively. Resistance to hygromycin (CM containing 250 µg/ml hygromycin, A.G.Scientific Inc, USA) or ammonium glufosinate (BM containing 40 µg/ml ammonium glufosinate, Cluzeau Info Labo, France) was used to select the fungal transformants. Southern blot analysis and PCR were performed to identify the correct gene-replacement events (pdeH::HPH1 or pdeL::BAR). The double mutant pdeHΔ pdeLΔ was like wise generated by introducing pFGLpdeHKO into the pdeLΔ strain. Southern blot analysis was used to confirm the gene replacement (pdeH::HPH1) and copy number of the integron.
Plasmid constructs for RFP-PDEH fusion
To generate an in-frame translational fusion of RFP-PdeH, the promoter fragment (about 1 kb) of the PDEH gene was PCR amplified from genomic DNA of the wild type, using the primers (5′- CAGAGAGAATTCGTTCGGCTCAATTCAATTCGA) and (5′- CAGAGAGAGCTCCGTGGGCCCAAAGAGCGTCCA). The RFP coding sequence was amplified from pDsRED-Monomeric-N1 (Clontech, CA, USA) using the primers (5′- CAGAGAGCGCTCATGGACAACACCGAGGAC) and (5′- CAGAGACCATGGCCTGGGAGCCGGAGTG). A 3.9 kb fragment comprising the entire PDEH coding sequence as well as the downstream 1 kb region was amplified using the primers (5′- CAGAGACCATGGAGAATGCTGCCTGCAAT) and (5′-AGAGAGGATCCTGCCAAGTTGTCACTTTCCAAGT). Underlined text in the primers corresponds to the restriction enzyme sites used for cloning. All the three PCR products obtained were cloned into pFGL97 to get pFGL-NT-Comp construct with resistance to ammonium-gluphosinate (Cluzeau Info Labo, France) as a fungal selectable marker. This construct was introduced as a single-copy insertion into the pdeHΔ strain.
Plasmid constructs for PROMpg1-GFP-PDEH and PROMpg1-GFP-PDEL fusion
eGFP was amplified using the following primers (5′-CAGACCATGGTGAGCAAGGGCGAGGA) and (5′- CAGACATATGCTTGTACAGCTCGTCCAT) from pEGFP-N1 (Clontech, CA, USA). A ∼3.0 kb fragment encoding the complete PDEH coding sequence was amplified using the primers (5′- CAGACATATGGAGAATGCTGCCTGCAAT) and (5′- CAGATCTAGATCAACCAGCAGTGTC). Similarly, a ∼2.6 kb fragment coding for the entire PDEL sequence was amplified using the following primer pairs (5′- CAGACATATGGGCGAGGGCAGCGCCGAA) and (5′- CAGATCTAGATCACAAGTACAATGCCTCGCCA). Underlined text denotes the restriction enzyme sites used for cloning. In both the cases the amplified PCR products (eGFP and PDEH) or (eGFP and PDEL) were cloned in-frame, under the constitutive MPG1 promoter and TrpC terminator in pFGL275 to obtain pFGL-PROMpg1-GFP-PDEH and pFGL- PROMpg1-GFP-PDEL constructs respectively. pFGL-PROMpg1-GFP-PDEH was introduced into the pdeHΔ strain, while the pFGL-PROMpg1-GFP-PDEL was introduced into the wild type strain via Agrobacterium T-DNA-mediated transformation. Fungal transformants was selected based on resistance towards ammonium glufosinate (BM containing 40 µg/ml ammonium glufosinate, Cluzeau Info Labo, France). Transformants were screened for GFP expression and confirmed by sequencing genomic DNA and southern blot analysis.
Quantitative Real-Time RT-PCR
Total RNA was extracted using RNeasy Plant Mini Kit (Qiagen, USA) from ungerminated wild type conidia (0 h), or WT conidia germinated for 3 h and 6 h on hydrophobic surface of GelBond membranes (Lonza Walkersville Inc., USA). Total RNA was also extracted from wild type conidia inoculated on detached barley leaves at 21 h, 24 h, 29 h and 48 h. Purified RNA was treated with DNase (Roche Diagnostics, Germany) and were verified as DNA free by using them directly as template in a PCR assay. First-strand cDNA was then synthesized using 2 µg total RNA and AMV Reverse Transcriptase (Roche Diagnostics, Germany) in the presence of oligo dT18. Reactions were performed in 10 µl volume containing 25 ng of cDNA, 0.5 µM of each primer and 5 µl of Power SYBR Green PCR Master Mix (Applied Biosystems) using 7900HT Fast Real-Time PCR system. The following cycling parameters were used, 50°C 2 minute, 1 cycle; 95°C 10 minute, 1 cycle; 95°C 15 second, 60°C 1 minute, 40 cycles. Relative abundance of transcripts was analyzed by the 2−ΔΔCt method [110] and average threshold cycle (Ct) normalized to β-tubulin transcript for each condition as 2−ΔCt. Fold changes were calculated as 2−ΔΔCt. The primer pairs used for quantitative RTPCR were: For MGG_04795 (5′- TTTGATCAGCGTTACCAAGG) and (5′- CGGTGACCAACATTCTCTTG); MGG_00604 (5′- CATGATGGCTGCTTCTGACT) and (5′-CGACGAGTTCTTGTTCTGGA) MGG_ 05664 (5′- GCTTGAGCGCTGGAGAATGT) and (5′- TAACGAGCCGATCTGTACCA); MGG_07707 (5′- CTTCTACAGCAGAGACACC) and (5′- GCTCCTGCATAATAATGTCC). Each Real-Time RTPCR reaction was repeated three times independently with three biological replicates per sample. The melting curve analysis was used to determine the specificity of the amplifications. Reactions with no cDNA added (no template controls) were performed in parallel and monitored for primer dimers. Real-Time RTPCR primers were designed to span introns whenever possible.
Quantification of intracellular cAMP
Quantification of intracellular levels of cAMP was essentially carried out as described [71]. Freshly harvested conidia (0 h), conidia germinated for 6 h, as well as conidia that have formed mature appressoria following 21 h, 24 h, 28 h or 30 h incubation on the inductive (hydrophobic) surface of GelBond membranes (Lonza Walkersville Inc., USA) were harvested, frozen and lyophilized for 16 h. Lyophilized fungal biomass was individually ground into a fine powder in liquid nitrogen and equal weights of the fine powder was re-suspended in 200 µl of chilled 6% Trichloro acetic acid (TCA) and incubated on ice for 10 min. After centrifugation at 4000 rpm for 15 min at 4°C, the supernatant was collected and extracted four times with five volumes of water-saturated diethyl ether to remove the TCA. The remaining aqueous extract was lyophilized and dissolved in the assay buffer. In total, each assay was repeated three times independently with two biological replicates for each strain. The cAMP levels were quantified using the cAMP Biotrak Immuno-assay System (Amersham Biosciences, USA). For estimation of cAMP levels, the pdeHΔ pdeLΔ mutant was grown on nitrocellulose membranes (Millipore, USA) placed on prune agar (PA) medium. These cultures were incubated at 28°C for 3 d, followed by exposure to light for 24 h. The resultant colonies were scraped gently in the presence of diluted assay buffer to harvest the mycelial and aerial growth. Care was taken not to damage or include the nitrocellulose membrane in the fungal biomass. Further processing of the sample for cAMP measurements, was essentially carried out as described above. The double deletion mutant did not display any difference in growth pattern or characteristics on the nitrocellulose membrane, compared to growth without such membranes under the same conditions.
Microscopic analysis
Bright field and epifluorescence microscopy utilized the Olympus IX71 or BX51 (Olympus, Japan) equipped with a Plan APO 100X/1.45 or UPlan FLN 60X/1.25 objective with appropriate filter sets. Images were captured using a Cool SNAP HQ camera (Photometrics, USA) and processed using Image J (National Institutes of Health, USA), MetaVue (Universal Imaging, USA) and Adobe Photoshop 7.0 (Adobe Inc, USA).
Supporting Information
Zdroje
1. PierceK
PremontR
LefkowitzR
2002 Seven-transmembrane receptors. Nature Reviews Molecular Cell Biology 639 650
2. HouslayMD
BaillieGS
MauriceDH
2007 cAMP-Specific phosphodiesterase-4 enzymes in the cardiovascular system: a molecular toolbox for generating compartmentalized cAMP signaling. Circ Res 100 950 966
3. BeavoJ
FrancisSH
HouslayM
2006 Cyclic nucleotide Phosphodiesterases in Health and Disease. CRC Press,Boca Raton,Florida
4. HouslayMD
MilliganG
1997 Tailoring cAMP-signalling responses through isoform multiplicity. Trends Biochem Sci 22 217 224
5. HouslayMD
2001 PDE4 cAMP-specific phosphodiesterases. Prog Nucleic Acid Res Mol Biol 69 249 315
6. HouslayMD
SullivanM
BolgerGB
1998 The multienzyme PDE4 cyclic adenosine monophosphate-specific phosphodiesterase family: intracellular targeting, regulation, and selective inhibition by compounds exerting anti-inflammatory and antidepressant actions. Adv Pharmacol 44 225 342
7. HuY
LiuE
BaiX
ZhangA
2009 The localization and concentration of the PDE2-encoded high-affinity cAMP phosphodiesterase is regulated by cAMP-dependent protein kinase A in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. FEMS Yeast Res
8. NamyO
Duchateau-NguyenG
RoussetJP
2002 Translational readthrough of the PDE2 stop codon modulates cAMP levels in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Mol Microbiol 43 641 652
9. BenderAT
BeavoJA
2006 Cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterases: molecular regulation to clinical use. Pharmacol Rev 58 488 520
10. CooperDM
2003 Regulation and organization of adenylyl cyclases and cAMP. Biochem J 375 517 529
11. OmoriK
KoteraJ
2007 Overview of PDEs and their Regulation. Circulation research 100 309 327
12. ContiM
BeavoJ
2007 Biochemistry and physiology of cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterases: essential components in cyclic nucleotide signaling. Annu Rev Biochem 76 481 511
13. LemaireK
Van de VeldeS
Van DijckP
TheveleinJM
2004 Glucose and sucrose act as agonist and mannose as antagonist ligands of the G protein-coupled receptor Gpr1 in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Mol Cell 16 293 299
14. JonesDL
PettyJ
HoyleDC
HayesA
OliverSG
2004 Genome-Wide Analysis of the Effects of Heat Shock on a Saccharomyces cerevisiae Mutant With a Constitutively Activated cAMP-Dependent Pathway. Comp Funct Genomics 5 419 431
15. JonesDL
PettyJ
HoyleDC
HayesA
RagniE
2003 Transcriptome profiling of a Saccharomyces cerevisiae mutant with a constitutively activated Ras/cAMP pathway. Physiol Genomics 16 107 118
16. PanX
HeitmanJ
1999 Cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase regulates pseudohyphal differentiation in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Mol Cell Biol 19 4874 4887
17. ParkJI
GrantCM
DawesIW
2005 The high-affinity cAMP phosphodiesterase of Saccharomyces cerevisiae is the major determinant of cAMP levels in stationary phase: involvement of different branches of the Ras-cyclic AMP pathway in stress responses. Biochem Biophys Res Commun 327 311 319
18. SchneperL
KraussA
MiyamotoR
FangS
BroachJR
2004 The Ras/protein kinase A pathway acts in parallel with the Mob2/Cbk1 pathway to effect cell cycle progression and proper bud site selection. Eukaryot Cell 3 108 120
19. DaveyJ
1998 Fusion of a fission Yeast. Yeast 1529 1566
20. YamamotoM
1996 The molecular control mechanisms of meiosis in fission yeast. Trends Biochemical Sciences 18 22
21. DeVotiJ, SG
BeachD
McLeodM
1991 Interaction between ran1+ protein kinase and cAMP dependent protein kinase as negative regulators of fission yeast meiosis. EMBO J 3759 3768
22. HiguchiT
WatanabeY
YamamotoM
2002 Protein kinase A regulates sexual development and gluconeogenesis through phosphorylation of the Zn finger transcriptional activator Rst2p in fission yeast. Mol Cell Biol 22 1 11
23. BahnYS
StaabJ
SundstromP
2003 Increased high-affinity phosphodiesterase PDE2 gene expression in germ tubes counteracts CAP1-dependent synthesis of cyclic AMP, limits hypha production and promotes virulence of Candida albicans. Mol Microbiol 50 391 409
24. JungWH
StatevaLI
2003 The cAMP phosphodiesterase encoded by CaPDE2 is required for hyphal development in Candida albicans. Microbiology 149 2961 2976
25. JungWH
WarnP
RagniE
PopoloL
NunnCD
2005 Deletion of PDE2, the gene encoding the high-affinity cAMP phosphodiesterase, results in changes of the cell wall and membrane in Candida albicans. Yeast 22 285 294
26. HarcusD
NantelA
MarcilA
RigbyT
WhitewayM
2004 Transcription profiling of cyclic AMP signaling in Candida albicans. Mol Biol Cell 15 4490 4499
27. BahnYS
MolendaM
StaabJF
LymanCA
GordonLJ
2007 Genome-wide transcriptional profiling of the cyclic AMP-dependent signaling pathway during morphogenic transitions of Candida albicans. Eukaryot Cell 6 2376 2390
28. HuG
SteenBR
LianT
ShamAP
TamN
2007 Transcriptional regulation by protein kinase A in Cryptococcus neoformans. PLoS Pathog 3 e42 doi:10.1371/journal.ppat.0030042
29. D'SouzaCA
HeitmanJ
2001 Conserved cAMP signaling cascades regulate fungal development and virulence. FEMS Microbiol Rev 25 349 364
30. HicksJK
BahnYS
HeitmanJ
2005 Pde1 phosphodiesterase modulates cyclic AMP levels through a protein kinase A-mediated negative feedback loop in Cryptococcus neoformans. Eukaryot Cell 4 1971 1981
31. AlspaughJA
PerfectJR
HeitmanJ
1997 Cryptococcus neoformans mating and virulence are regulated by the G-protein alpha subunit GPA1 and cAMP. Genes Dev 11 3206 3217
32. KozubowskiL
LeeSC
HeitmanJ
2009 Signalling pathways in the pathogenesis of Cryptococcus. Cell Microbiol 11 370 380
33. Pukkila-WorleyR
AlspaughJA
2004 Cyclic AMP signaling in Cryptococcus neoformans. FEMS Yeast Res 4 361 367
34. LarrayaLM
BoyceKJ
SoA
SteenBR
JonesS
2005 Serial analysis of gene expression reveals conserved links between protein kinase A, ribosome biogenesis, and phosphate metabolism in Ustilago maydis. Eukaryot Cell 4 2029 2043
35. RegenfelderE
SpelligT
HartmannA
LauensteinS
BolkerM
1997 G proteins in Ustilago maydis: transmission of multiple signals? EMBO J 16 1934 1942
36. DurrenbergerF
WongK
KronstadJW
1998 Identification of a cAMP-dependent protein kinase catalytic subunit required for virulence and morphogenesis in Ustilago maydis. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 95 5684 5689
37. GoldSE
BrogdonSM
MayorgaME
KronstadJW
1997 The Ustilago maydis regulatory subunit of a cAMP-dependent protein kinase is required for gall formation in maize. Plant Cell 9 1585 1594
38. LeeN
KronstadJW
2002 ras2 Controls morphogenesis, pheromone response, and pathogenicity in the fungal pathogen Ustilago maydis. Eukaryot Cell 1 954 966
39. BannoS
OchiaiN
NoguchiR
KimuraM
YamaguchiI
2005 A catalytic subunit of cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase, PKAC-1, regulates asexual differentiation in Neurospora crassa. Genes Genet Syst 80 25 34
40. BencinaM
PannemanH
RuijterGJ
LegisaM
VisserJ
1997 Characterization and overexpression of the Aspergillus niger gene encoding the cAMP-dependent protein kinase catalytic subunit. Microbiology 143 (Pt 4) 1211 1220
41. BrakhageAA
LiebmannB
2005 Aspergillus fumigatus conidial pigment and cAMP signal transduction: significance for virulence. Med Mycol 43 Suppl 1 S75 82
42. GrosseC
HeinekampT
KniemeyerO
GehrkeA
BrakhageAA
2008 Protein kinase A regulates growth, sporulation, and pigment formation in Aspergillus fumigatus. Appl Environ Microbiol 74 4923 4933
43. IveyFD
KaysAM
BorkovichKA
2002 Shared and independent roles for a Galpha(i) protein and adenylyl cyclase in regulating development and stress responses in Neurospora crassa. Eukaryot Cell 1 634 642
44. KaysAM
RowleyPS
BaasiriRA
BorkovichKA
2000 Regulation of conidiation and adenylyl cyclase levels by the Galpha protein GNA-3 in Neurospora crassa. Mol Cell Biol 20 7693 7705
45. KaysAM
BorkovichKA
2004 Severe impairment of growth and differentiation in a Neurospora crassa mutant lacking all heterotrimeric G alpha proteins. Genetics 166 1229 1240
46. LiebmannB
MullerM
BraunA
BrakhageAA
2004 The cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase a network regulates development and virulence in Aspergillus fumigatus. Infect Immun 72 5193 5203
47. SaudoharM
BencinaM
van de VondervoortPJ
PannemanH
LegisaM
2002 Cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase is involved in morphogenesis of Aspergillus niger. Microbiology 148 2635 2645
48. LiebmannB
GattungS
JahnB
BrakhageAA
2003 cAMP signaling in Aspergillus fumigatus is involved in the regulation of the virulence gene pksP and in defense against killing by macrophages. Mol Genet Genomics 269 420 435
49. LafonA
HanKH
SeoJA
YuJH
d'EnfertC
2006 G-protein and cAMP-mediated signaling in Aspergilli: a genomic perspective. Fungal Genet Biol 43 490 502
50. UnoI
MatsumotoK
IshikawaT
1983 Characterization of a cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase-deficient mutant in yeast. J Biol Chem 258 3539 3542
51. LondesboroughJ
1978 The high-Km cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase of baker's yeast is a zinc metalloenzyme [proceedings]. Biochem Soc Trans 6 1218 1220
52. LondesboroughJC
1975 Soluble and membrane-bound cyclic AMP diesterase activity with a low Michaelis constant in baker's yeast. FEBS Lett 50 283 287
53. LondesboroughJ
SuorantaK
1983 The zinc-containing high Km cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase of bakers' yeast. J Biol Chem 258 2966 2972
54. MaP
WeraS
Van DijckP
TheveleinJM
1999 The PDE1-encoded low-affinity phosphodiesterase in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae has a specific function in controlling agonist-induced cAMP signaling. Mol Biol Cell 10 91 104
55. HoffmanCS
2005 Glucose sensing via the protein kinase A pathway in Schizosaccharomyces pombe. Biochem Soc Trans 33 261 264
56. WeraS
MaP
TheveleinJM
1997 Glucose exerts opposite effects on mRNA versus protein and activity levels of Pde1, the low-affinity cAMP phosphodiesterase from budding yeast, Saccharomyces cerevisiae. FEBS Lett 420 147 150
57. WilsonRB
RenaultG
JacquetM
TatchellK
1993 The pde2 gene of Saccharomyces cerevisiae is allelic to rca1 and encodes a phosphodiesterase which protects the cell from extracellular cAMP. FEBS Lett 325 191 195
58. WentzingerL
SeebeckT
2006 Protozoalphosphodiesterases.
BeavoJA
FrancisS
HouslayM
277 300 In: Phosphodiesterases in Health and Disease; CRC Press
59. SassP
FieldJ
NikawaJ
TodaT
WiglerM
1986 Cloning and characterization of the high-affinity cAMP phosphodiesterase of Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 83 9303 9307
60. MatviwH
LiJ
YoungD
1993 The Schizosaccharomyces pombe pde1/cgs2 gene encodes a cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase. Biochem Biophys Res Commun 194 79 82
61. HoyerLL
CieslinskiLB
McLaughlinMM
TorphyTJ
ShatzmanAR
1994 A Candida albicans cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase: cloning and expression in Saccharomyces cerevisiae and biochemical characterization of the recombinant enzyme. Microbiology 140 (Pt 7) 1533 1542
62. MasciarelliS
HornerK
LiuC
ParkSH
HinckleyM
2004 Cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase 3A-deficient mice as a model of female infertility. J Clin Invest 114 196 205
63. FevreEM
PicozziK
JanninJ
WelburnSC
MaudlinI
2006 Human African trypanosomiasis: Epidemiology and control. Adv Parasitol 61 167 221
64. OuSH
1985 Rice Diseases: Commonwealth Mycological Institute, Kew, Surrey, England.
65. LeeK
SinghP
ChungWC
AshJ
KimTS
2006 Light regulation of asexual development in the rice blast fungus, Magnaporthe oryzae. Fungal Genet Biol 43 694 706
66. LeungH
ShiZ
1994 Genetic regulation of sporulation in the rice blast fungus. 35 50 Zeigler, RS, Leong,SA, Teng, PS (Eds), Rice Blast Disease CAB international, Oxon
67. LauGW
HamerJE
1998 Acropetal: a genetic locus required for conidiophore architecture and pathogenicity in the rice blast fungus. Fungal Genet Biol 24 228 239
68. BeckermanJL
EbboleDJ
1996 MPG1, a gene encoding a fungal hydrophobin of Magnaporthe grisea, is involved in surface recognition. Mol Plant Microbe Interact 9 450 456
69. LeeYH
DeanRA
1993 cAMP Regulates Infection Structure Formation in the Plant Pathogenic Fungus Magnaporthe grisea. Plant Cell 5 693 700
70. LiuH
RamanujamR
NaqviN
2009 Surface sensing and signaling during initiation of rice blast disease. In Advances in Genetics, Genomics and Control of Rice Blast Disease 23 32
71. LiuH
SureshA
WillardFS
SiderovskiDP
LuS
2007 Rgs1 regulates multiple Galpha subunits in Magnaporthe pathogenesis, asexual growth and thigmotropism. Embo J 26 690 700
72. ChoiW
DeanRA
1997 The adenylate cyclase gene MAC1 of Magnaporthe grisea controls appressorium formation and other aspects of growth and development. Plant Cell 9 1973 1983
73. CharbonneauH
BeierN
WalshKA
BeavoJA
1986 Identification of a conserved domain among cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterases from diverse species. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 83 9308 9312
74. BalhaderePV
TalbotNJ
2001 PDE1 encodes a P-type ATPase involved in appressorium-mediated plant infection by the rice blast fungus Magnaporthe grisea. Plant Cell 13 1987 2004
75. TalbotNJ
1995 Having a blast: exploring the pathogenicity of Magnaporthe grisea. Trends Microbiol 3 9 16
76. Veneault-FourreyC
BarooahM
EganM
WakleyG
TalbotNJ
2006 Autophagic fungal cell death is necessary for infection by the rice blast fungus. Science 312 580 583
77. McCahillA
CampbellL
McSorleyT
SoodA
LynchMJ
2008 In cardiac myocytes, cAMP elevation triggers the down-regulation of transcripts and promoter activity for cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase-4A10 (PDE4A10). Cell Signal 20 2071 2083
78. RileyBB
BarclaySL
1990 Conditions that alter intracellular cAMP levels affect expression of the cAMP phosphodiesterase gene in Dictyostelium. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 87 4746 4750
79. MosqueraG
GiraldoMC
KhangCH
CoughlanS
ValentB
2009 Interaction transcriptome analysis identifies Magnaporthe oryzae BAS1-4 as Biotrophy-associated secreted proteins in rice blast disease. Plant Cell 21 1273 1290
80. SkamniotiP
GurrSJ
2007 Magnaporthe grisea cutinase2 mediates appressorium differentiation and host penetration and is required for full virulence. Plant Cell 19 2674 2689
81. MitchellTK
DeanRA
1995 The cAMP-dependent protein kinase catalytic subunit is required for appressorium formation and pathogenesis by the rice blast pathogen Magnaporthe grisea. Plant Cell 7 1869 1878
82. SoanesDM
KershawMJ
CooleyRN
TalbotNJ
2002 Regulation of the MPG1 hydrophobin gene in the rice blast fungus Magnaporthe grisea. Mol Plant Microbe Interact 15 1253 1267
83. NishimuraM
HayashiN
JwaNS
LauGW
HamerJE
2000 Insertion of the LINE retrotransposon MGL causes a conidiophore pattern mutation in Magnaporthe grisea. Mol Plant Microbe Interact 13 892 894
84. OdenbachD
BrethB
ThinesE
WeberRW
AnkeH
2007 The transcription factor Con7p is a central regulator of infection-related morphogenesis in the rice blast fungus Magnaporthe grisea. Mol Microbiol 64 293 307
85. LiuS
DeanRA
1997 G protein alpha subunit genes control growth, development, and pathogenicity of Magnaporthe grisea. Mol Plant Microbe Interact 10 1075 1086
86. NishimuraM
ParkG
XuJR
2003 The G-beta subunit MGB1 is involved in regulating multiple steps of infection-related morphogenesis in Magnaporthe grisea. Mol Microbiol 50 231 243
87. HanKH
SeoJA, JHY
2004 Regulators of G-protein signalling in Aspergillus nidulans: RgsA downregulates stress response and stimulates asexual sporulation through attenuation of GanB (Gα) signalling. Molecular Microbiology 53 529 540
88. ChoiGH
ChenB
NDL
1995 Virus-mediated or transgenic suppression of a G protein α subunit and attenuation of fungal virulence. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 92 305 309
89. SegersGC, DLN
2003 Constitutively activated Gα negatively regulates virulence, reproduction and hydrophobin gene expression in the chestnut blight fungus Cryphonectria parasitica. Fungal Genet Biol 38 198 208
90. RosenS
YuJH
AdamsTH
1999 The Aspergillus nidulans sfaD gene encodes a G protein beta subunit that is required for normal growth and repression of sporulation. Embo J 18 5592 5600
91. HicksJK
YuJH
KellerNP
AdamsTH
1997 Aspergillus sporulation and mycotoxin production both require inactivation of the FadA G alpha protein-dependent signaling pathway. Embo J 16 4916 4923
92. AdachiK
HamerJE
1998 Divergent cAMP signaling pathways regulate growth and pathogenesis in the rice blast fungus Magnaporthe grisea. Plant Cell 10 1361 1374
93. XuJ-R
UrbanM
SweigardJA
HamerJE
1997 The CPKA Gene of Magnaporthe grisea Is Essential for Appressorial Penetration. Molecular Plant Microbe Interactions 10 187
94. HouslayMD
2009 Underpinning compartmentalised cAMP signalling through targeted cAMP breakdown. Trends Biochem Sci
95. BaillieGS
2009 Compartmentalized signalling: spatial regulation of cAMP by the action of compartmentalized phosphodiesterases. Febs J 276 1790 1799
96. HouslayMD
AdamsDR
2003 PDE4 cAMP phosphodiesterases: modular enzymes that orchestrate signalling cross-talk, desensitization and compartmentalization. Biochem J 370 1 18
97. ShakurY
WilsonM
PooleyL
LobbanM
GriffithsSL
1995 Identification and characterization of the type-IVA cyclic AMP-specific phosphodiesterase RD1 as a membrane-bound protein expressed in cerebellum. Biochem J 306 (Pt 3) 801 809
98. BaillieGS
ScottJD
HouslayMD
2005 Compartmentalisation of phosphodiesterases and protein kinase A: opposites attract. FEBS Lett 579 3264 3270
99. WilsonD
Tutulan-CunitaA
JungW
HauserNC
HernandezR
2007 Deletion of the high-affinity cAMP phosphodiesterase encoded by PDE2 affects stress responses and virulence in Candida albicans. Mol Microbiol 65 841 856
100. LondesboroughJ
JonkkariL
1982 Low Km cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase of yeast may be bound to ribosomes associated with the nucleus. Mol Cell Biochem 46 65 71
101. HustonE
LynchMJ
MohamedA
CollinsDM
HillEV
2008 EPAC and PKA allow cAMP dual control over DNA-PK nuclear translocation. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 105 12791 12796
102. SoundararajanS
JeddG
LiX
Ramos-PamplonaM
ChuaNH
2004 Woronin body function in Magnaporthe grisea is essential for efficient pathogenesis and for survival during nitrogen starvation stress. Plant Cell 16 1564 1574
103. NaqviNI
BonmanJM
MackillDJ
NelsonRJ
ChattooBB
1995 Identification of RAPD markers linked to a major gene for blast resistance in rice. Molecular Breeding 1 341 348
104. VogelJ
SomervilleS
2000 Isolation and characterization of powdery mildew-resistant Arabidopsis mutants. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 97 1897 1902
105. Ramos-PamplonaM
NaqviNI
2006 Host invasion during rice-blast disease requires carnitine-dependent transport of peroxisomal acetyl-CoA. Mol Microbiol 61 61 75
106. HarrisSD
MorrellJL
HamerJE
1994 Identification and characterization of Aspergillus nidulans mutants defective in cytokinesis. Genetics 136 517 532
107. SambrookJ
FritschEF
ManiatisT
1989 Molecular Cloning:A laboratory Manual. Cold Spring Harbor, NY Cold Spring Laboratory Press
108. AltschulSF
MaddenTL
SchafferAA
ZhangJ
ZhangZ
1997 Gapped BLAST and PSI-BLAST: a new generation of protein database search programs. Nucleic Acids Res 25 3389 3402
109. ThompsonJD
HigginsDG
GibsonTJ
1994 CLUSTAL W: improving the sensitivity of progressive multiple sequence alignment through sequence weighting, position-specific gap penalties and weight matrix choice. Nucleic Acids Res 22 4673 4680
110. LivakKJ
SchmittgenTD
2001 Analysis of relative gene expression data using real-time quantitative PCR and the 2(-Delta Delta C(T)) Method. Methods 25 402 408
Štítky
Hygiena a epidemiológia Infekčné lekárstvo LaboratóriumČlánok vyšiel v časopise
PLOS Pathogens
2010 Číslo 5
- Parazitičtí červi v terapii Crohnovy choroby a dalších zánětlivých autoimunitních onemocnění
- Očkování proti virové hemoragické horečce Ebola experimentální vakcínou rVSVDG-ZEBOV-GP
- Koronavirus hýbe světem: Víte jak se chránit a jak postupovat v případě podezření?
Najčítanejšie v tomto čísle
- Quorum Sensing Inhibition Selects for Virulence and Cooperation in
- The Role of Intestinal Microbiota in the Development and Severity of Chemotherapy-Induced Mucositis
- Susceptibility to Anthrax Lethal Toxin-Induced Rat Death Is Controlled by a Single Chromosome 10 Locus That Includes
- Demonstration of Cross-Protective Vaccine Immunity against an Emerging Pathogenic Ebolavirus Species