| Literature DB >> 30469367 |
Klaus Ringsborg Westphal1, Rasmus Dam Wollenberg2, Florian-Alexander Herbst3, Jens Laurids Sørensen4, Teis Esben Sondergaard5, Reinhard Wimmer6.
Abstract
There is an increasing demand for products from natural sources, which includes a growing market for naturally-produced colorants. Filamentous fungi produce a vast number of chemically diverse pigments and are therefore explored as an easily accessible source. In this study we examine the positive regulatory effect of the transcription factor AurR1 on the aurofusarin gene cluster in Fusarium graminearum. Proteomic analyses showed that overexpression of AurR1 resulted in a significant increase of five of the eleven proteins belonging to the aurofusarin biosynthetic pathway. Further, the production of aurofusarin was increased more than threefold in the overexpression mutant compared to the wild type, reaching levels of 270 mg/L. In addition to biosynthesis of aurofusarin, several yet undescribed putative naphthoquinone/anthraquinone analogue compounds were observed in the overexpression mutant. Our results suggest that it is possible to enhance the aurofusarin production through genetic engineering.Entities:
Keywords: Fusarium; PKS12; aurR1; aurofusarin; fungi; mycotoxins; natural products; pigment; polyketide; secondary metabolites
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30469367 PMCID: PMC6266765 DOI: 10.3390/toxins10110485
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Toxins (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6651 Impact factor: 4.546
The PKS12 gene cluster in F. graminearum. Predicted protein function by Pfam or InterPro.
| Locus | Name | UniProt ID | Predicted Function | Mutant (LFQ)/Wt (LFQ) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| FG02320 | AurR1 | I1RF54 | Positive acting transcription factor | |
| FG02321 | AurO | I1RF55 | Oxidoreductase | 4.5 |
| FG02322 | AurT | I1RF56 | Rubrufusarin pump | 1.6 |
| FG02323 | AurR2 | I1RF57 | Transcription factor | |
| FG02324 | PKS12 | I1RF58 | Polyketide synthase producing YWA1 | 10.8 |
| FG02325 | AurZ | I1RF59 | Dehydratase | 4.6 |
| FG02326 | AurJ | I1RF60 | 8.4 | |
| FG02327 | AurF | I1RF61 | Monooxygenase | 11.2 |
| FG02328 | Gip1 | I1RF62 | Cu-oxidase | 7.9 |
| FG02329 | AurS | I1RF63 | Fasciclin-like domain containing protein | |
| FG02330 | AurL2 1 | I1RF64 | Cu-oxidase |
1 Is not required for aurofusarin production.
Figure 1The PKS12 gene cluster (a) and housekeeping genes (b) with mean log2 (label-free relative quantification) intensities of identified proteins and standard error bars calculated from three biological replicates of OE::aurR1 and wt grown on Cz medium. The p-values are calculated from a two-tailed Student’s t-test. Missing/undetected values from the wild type were imputed to reflect low-abundant proteins.
Figure 2Scatter plots of 908 identified proteins sorted from highest to lowest log2 (intensity-based absolute quantification) intensities calculated from three biological replicates of OE::aurR1 and the wt grown on a Cz medium. The proteins from the PKS12 gene cluster are highlighted and the dotted lines show the correlation between OE::aurR1 and the wt. The wt plot is downshifted by five log2 units.
Figure 3Color differences of wild type and mutants. (a) Wild type Fusarium graminearum (wt), aurR1 knockout mutant (KO::aurR1), and OE::aurR1 grown on a Cz agar medium for 6 days. (b) Cultures of wt and OE::aurR1 grown for 3 days in a liquid Cz medium. 1H-NMR quantification of aurofusarin from biological duplicates are indicated in mg/mL.
Figure 4Chromatograms from a metabolite extract of Cz medium 5 days after inoculation with OE::aurR1. Left: a UV 400 nm chromatogram (spectral background subtracted) with selected peaks (A–E) and underlying colored extracted ion chromatograms (EICs) of selected masses (1–11, [M + H]+ ± 0.02 Da) scaled by relative intensities. Right: UV spectra (205–600 nm) for peaks A–E.
List of selected masses from Figure 4 number 1–11 (#) including retention time (RT), observed charged mass ([M + H]+), proposed chemical formula, and the compound name/modification relative to aurofusarin.
| # | RT (min) | Mass [M + H]+ | Chemical Formula | Name/Variation |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 10.2; 12.9 1; 13.4; 14.3 | 587.0820 | 2 C30H18O13 | +O |
| 2 | 10.9 (A); 11.7 | 557.0715 | 2 C29H16O12 | −CH2 |
| 3 | 12.5 | 603.0769 | 2 C30H18O14 | +2O |
| 4 | 12.9 | 589.0977 | 2 C30H20O13 | +H2O |
| 5 | 13.6 (B); 14.1 (C) | 571.0871 | C30H18O12 | aurofusarin |
| 6 | 13.6 1 (B); 14.1 (C) | 573.1027 | C30H20O12 | +2H |
| 7 | 14.11 (C); 14.7 | 575.1184 | C30H22O12 | +4H |
| 8 | 15.2 | 541.0765 | C29H16O11 | −CH2O |
| 9 | 15.7 | 273.0758 | C15H12O5 | rubrofusarin |
| 10 | 15.8 (D) | 557.1078 | C30H20O11 | fuscofusarin |
| 11 | 17.7 (E) | 543.1286 | C30H22O10 | −2O + 4H |
1 The observed EIC peak was caused by an isotopomer of a different compound or by a compound with a closely related mass. 2 Chemical formulae that does not match any natural products with a naphthoquinone/anthraquinone structure based on a Reaxys and PubChem database search.