Comparative transcriptomics reveal different mechanisms for hyphal growth across four plant-associated dimorphic fungi

2021 ◽  
pp. 103565
Author(s):  
Teeratas Kijpornyongpan ◽  
M. Catherine Aime
2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lauren Rodriguez ◽  
Mark Voorhies ◽  
Sarah Gilmore ◽  
Sinem Beyhan ◽  
Anthony Myint ◽  
...  

ABSTRACTPhenotypic switching between two opposing cellular states is a fundamental aspect of biology, and fungi provide facile systems to analyze the interactions between regulons that control this type of switch. A long-standing mystery in fungal pathogens of humans is how thermally dimorphic fungi switch their developmental form in response to temperature. These fungi, including the subject of this study,Histoplasma capsulatum, are temperature-responsive organisms that utilize unknown regulatory pathways to couple their cell shape and associated attributes to the temperature of their environment.H. capsulatumgrows as a multicellular hypha in the soil that switches to a pathogenic yeast form in response to the temperature of a mammalian host. These states can be triggered in the laboratory simply by growing the fungus either at room temperature (where it grows as hyphae) or at 37°C (where it grows as yeast). Prior worked revealed that 15-20% of transcripts are differentially expressed in response to temperature, but it is unclear which transcripts are linked to specific phenotypic changes such as cell morphology or virulence. To elucidate temperature-responsive regulons, we previously identified four transcription factors (Ryp1-4) that are required for yeast-phase growth at 37°C; in eachrypmutant, the fungus grows constitutively as hyphae regardless of temperature and the cells fail to express genes that are normally induced in response to growth at 37°C. Here we perform the first genetic screen to identify genes required for hyphal growth ofH. capsulatumat room temperature and find that disruption of the signaling mucinMSB2results in a yeast-locked phenotype. RNAseq experiments reveal thatMSB2is not required for the majority of gene expression changes that occur when cells are shifted to room temperature. However, a small subset of temperature-responsive genes is dependent onMSB2for its expression, thereby implicating these genes in the process of filamentation. Disruption or knockdown of an Msb2-dependent MAP kinase (HOG2) and an APSES transcription factor (STU1) prevents hyphal growth at room temperature, validating that the Msb2 regulon contains genes that control filamentation. Notably, the Msb2 regulon shows conserved hyphal-specific expression in other dimorphic fungi, suggesting that this work defines a small set of genes that are likely to be conserved regulators and effectors of filamentation in multiple fungi. In contrast, a few yeast-specific transcripts, including virulence factors that are normally expressed only at 37°C, are inappropriately expressed at room temperature in themsb2mutant, suggesting that expression of these genes is coupled to growth in the yeast form rather than to temperature. Finally, we find that the yeast-promoting transcription factor Ryp3 associates with theMSB2promoter and inhibitsMSB2transcript expression at 37°C, whereas Msb2 inhibits accumulation of Ryp transcripts and proteins at room temperature. These findings indicate that the Ryp and Msb2 circuits antagonize each other in a temperature-dependent manner, thereby allowing temperature to govern cell shape and gene expression in this ubiquitous fungal pathogen of humans.


2018 ◽  
Vol 63 (2) ◽  
pp. e01715-18 ◽  
Author(s):  
Suganya Viriyakosol ◽  
Mili Kapoor ◽  
Sharon Okamoto ◽  
Jonathan Covel ◽  
Quinlyn A. Soltow ◽  
...  

ABSTRACTCoccidioidomycosis is a systemic fungal infection caused by the inhalation of the arthroconidia of either of two closely related dimorphic fungi,Coccidioides immitisandC. posadasii, that are endemic in the southwestern United States and other areas in the Western Hemisphere. Chronic cavitary pulmonary infections and extrapulmonary sites of infection are very difficult to treat and often require lifelong azole therapy. APX001A is the first in a new class of broad-spectrum antifungal agents that inhibit Gwt1, an enzyme which is required for cell wall localization of glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI)-anchored mannoproteins in fungi. APX001A and several analogs were highly active against clinical isolates ofCoccidioides, inhibiting hyphal growth at low nanogram/ml concentrations. APX001 is the N-phosphonooxymethyl prodrug of APX001A, currently in clinical trials for the treatment of invasive fungal infections. Mice were treated orally once daily with 26 mg/kg/day of APX001 and the prodrug analog APX2097, 2 h after administration of the pan-cytochrome P450 inhibitor 1-aminobenzotriazole, which was used to enhance drug half-life and exposures to more closely mimic human pharmacokinetics of APX001A. Five days of treatment reduced lung colony counts by nearly 3 logs and prevented dissemination, similar to the efficacy of fluconazole dosed orally at 25 mg/kg twice daily. In a survival experiment, both APX001- and APX2097-treated mice survived significantly longer than control and fluconazole-treated mice. APX001 and other members of this new class of antifungal agents may offer great promise as effective therapies for coccidioidomycosis.


Author(s):  
John S. Gardner ◽  
W. M. Hess

Powdery mildews are characterized by the appearance of spots or patches of a white to grayish, powdery, mildewy growth on plant tissues, entire leaves or other organs. Ervsiphe cichoracearum, the powdery mildew of cucurbits is among the most serious parasites, and the most common. The conidia are formed similar to the process described for Ervsiphe graminis by Cole and Samson. Theconidial chains mature basipetally from a short, conidiophore mother-cell at the base of the fertile hypha which arises holoblastically from the conidiophore. During early development it probably elongates by polar-tip growth like a vegetative hypha. A septum forms just above the conidiophore apex. Additional septa develop in acropetal succession. However, the conidia of E. cichoracearum are more doliform than condia from E. graminis. The purpose of these investigations was to use scanning electron microscopy (SEM) to demonstrate the nature of hyphal growth and conidial formation of E. cichoracearum on field-grown squash leaves.


2021 ◽  
Vol 7 (5) ◽  
pp. 350
Author(s):  
Taisuke Seike ◽  
Natsue Sakata ◽  
Fumio Matsuda ◽  
Chikara Furusawa

The fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces japonicus, comprising S. japonicus var. japonicus and S. japonicus var. versatilis varieties, has unique characteristics such as striking hyphal growth not seen in other Schizosaccharomyces species; however, information on its diversity and evolution, in particular mating and sporulation, remains limited. Here we compared the growth and mating phenotypes of 17 wild strains of S. japonicus, including eight S. japonicus var. japonicus strains newly isolated from an insect (Drosophila). Unlike existing wild strains isolated from fruits/plants, the strains isolated from Drosophila sporulated at high frequency even under nitrogen-abundant conditions. In addition, one of the strains from Drosophila was stained by iodine vapor, although the type strain of S. japonicus var. japonicus is not stained. Sequence analysis further showed that the nucleotide and amino acid sequences of pheromone-related genes have diversified among the eight strains from Drosophila, suggesting crossing between S. japonicus cells of different genetic backgrounds occurs frequently in this insect. Much of yeast ecology remains unclear, but our findings suggest that insects such as Drosophila might be a good niche for mating and sporulation, and will provide a basis for the understanding of sporulation mechanisms via signal transduction, as well as the ecology and evolution of yeast.


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