| Literature DB >> 26886232 |
David Cánovas1,2, Jose F Marcos3, Ana T Marcos4, Joseph Strauss5.
Abstract
Nitric oxide (NO) is a remarkable gaseous molecule with multiple and important roles in different organisms, including fungi. However, the study of the biology of NO in fungi has been hindered by the lack of a complete knowledge on the different metabolic routes that allow a proper NO balance, and the regulation of these routes. Fungi have developed NO detoxification mechanisms to combat nitrosative stress, which have been mainly characterized by their connection to pathogenesis or nitrogen metabolism. However, the progress on the studies of NO anabolic routes in fungi has been hampered by efforts to disrupt candidate genes that gave no conclusive data until recently. This review summarizes the different roles of NO in fungal biology and pathogenesis, with an emphasis on the alternatives to explain fungal NO production and the recent findings on the involvement of nitrate reductase in the synthesis of NO and its regulation during fungal development.Entities:
Keywords: Aspergillus; Development; Flavohemoglobin; Fungal pathogens; Nitrate reductase; Nitric oxide
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Year: 2016 PMID: 26886232 PMCID: PMC4929157 DOI: 10.1007/s00294-016-0574-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Genet ISSN: 0172-8083 Impact factor: 3.886
Fig. 1NO biosynthetic and metabolic routes known in fungi and its role in fungal biology. a NO in fungi can originate from biosynthetic pathways or from external sources, such as the nitrosative stress generated by animal or plant hosts to combat fungal infections. Only one reductive pathway for the synthesis of NO has been deciphered in fungi, which involves an assimilatory nitrate reductase. Four detoxification mechanisms have been identified in fungi, of which three of them result in the conversion of NO into ammonium, nitrous oxide or nitrate. The diagram includes gene names from several fungal species to provide a broad view of the NO homeostasis in the fungal kingdom. NO regulates nitrogen metabolism through the inactivation of the nitrate reductase (and maybe some other mechanisms) and it is one of the earliest signals during the transition from vegetative growth to reproduction. b Staining of vegetative hyphae with the NO-sensitive fluorescent dye DAF-FM diacetate. c, d Micrograph of a conidiating culture of A. nidulans showing strong DAF-FM diacetate signal in the conidiophores d