| Literature DB >> 22957208 |
Laura Valdés-Santiago1, José Antonio Cervantes-Chávez, Claudia Geraldine León-Ramírez, José Ruiz-Herrera.
Abstract
Polyamines are essential metabolites present in all living organisms, and this subject has attracted the attention of researchers worldwide interested in defining their mode of action in the variable cell functions in which they are involved, from growth to development and differentiation. Although the mechanism of polyamine synthesis is almost universal, different biological groups show interesting differences in this aspect that require to be further analyzed. For these studies, fungi represent interesting models because of their characteristics and facility of analysis. During the last decades fungi have contributed to the understanding of polyamine metabolism. The use of specific inhibitors and the isolation of mutants have allowed the manipulation of the pathway providing information on its regulation. During host-fungus interaction polyamine metabolism suffers striking changes in response to infection, which requires examination. Additionally the role of polyamine transporter is getting importance because of its role in polyamine regulation. In this paper we analyze the metabolism of polyamines in fungi, and the difference of this process with other biological groups. Of particular importance is the difference of polyamine biosynthesis between fungi and plants, which makes this process an attractive target for the control of phytopathogenic fungi.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22957208 PMCID: PMC3432380 DOI: 10.1155/2012/837932
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Amino Acids ISSN: 2090-0112
Figure 1Polyamines biosynthetic pathway. (a) Comparison between biosynthetic pathways present in fungi and plants. (b) Polyamine retroconversion mechanism in fungi. Bold letters indicate products of the metabolic pathways in fungi. Italic letters indicate the enzymes that mediate the chemical reaction. Capital letters indicate products of the metabolic pathway exclusive in plants.
Distribution of enzymes involved in polyamine biosynthesis in phytophatogenic fungi and fungal-related Chromista organisms. We used S. cerevisiae well-characterized proteins as a template for in silico searches. The access codes of the Genbank entries are shown. (—) indicates absence of an homologous gene.
| Phytopapthogenic fungi, or fungal-related organisms | Phylum | Disease | Ornithine decarboxylase | Spermidine synthase | Spermine synthase | Polyamine oxidase |
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| Ascomycota | Multihost rot diseases |
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| Ascomycota | Multihost wilt disease |
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| Ascomycota | Maize seed rot |
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| Ascomycota | Wheat/barley head blight |
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| Ascomycota | Rice blast disease |
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| Ascomycota | Pea wilt |
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| Ascomycota | Banana black leaf streak |
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| Ascomycota | Wheat leaf blotch |
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| Ascomycota | Wheat glume blotch |
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| Basidiomycota | Cereal rusts |
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| Basidiomycota | Cereal rusts |
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| Basidiomycota | Corn smut disease |
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| Stramenopiles | Late blight potato blight |
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| Stramenopiles | Sudden oak death |
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| Stramenopiles | Soybean stem/root rot |
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Effect of polyamine inhibitors on fungal growth.
| Fungus | DFMO | DFMA | MGBG | Reference |
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+: growth inhibition; −: no inhibition of growth. DFMO: D, L-α-difluoromethylornithine, ornithine decarboxylase inhibitor. DFMA: difluoromethylarginine, arginine decarboxylase inhibitor. MGBG: methyglyoxal bis-[guanyl hydrazone], adenosylmethionine decarboxylase inhibitor.
Distribution of proteins involved in polyamine transport in phytophatogenic fungi. We used S. cerevisiae well-characterized proteins as a template for in silico searches. The access codes of the Genebank entries are shown.
| Phytopapthogenic fungus | Disease | TPO1 | TPO2 | TPO3 | TPO4 | TPO5 | UGA4 | DUR3 | SAM3 | SKY1 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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| Sudden oak death | — |
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| — | — | 38571 |
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| Soybean stem/root rot | — | 108536 | 108536 | 131465 | 156002 | 130593 | — | — | 112647 |
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| Corn smut diseases |
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| Cereal rusts |
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| Cereal rusts |
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