Literature DB >> 33758028

A Small Cysteine-Free Protein Acts as a Novel Regulator of Fungal Insect-Pathogenic Lifecycle and Genomic Expression.

Ya-Ni Mou1, Bo Fu1, Kang Ren1, Sheng-Hua Ying1, Ming-Guang Feng2.   

Abstract

Small secreted proteins (SSPs), particularly cysteine-rich proteins secreted during fungal infection, comprise virulence effectors in plant-pathogenic fungi but remain unknown in insect-pathogenic fungi. We report here that only a small cysteine-free protein (CFP) is indispensable for insect pathogenicity of Beauveria bassiana among 10 studied SSPs (99 to 274 amino acids [aa]), including seven hypothetical proteins containing 0 to 12 Cys residues. CFP (120 aa) features an N-terminal signal peptide (residues 1 to 17), a nuclear localization signal motif (residues 24 to 57), and no predictable domain. Its homologs exist exclusively in insect-pathogenic Cordycipitaceae and Clavicipitaceae. Fluorescence-tagged CFP fusion protein was localized in the nucleus but extracellularly undetectable, suggesting an inability for CFP to be secreted out. Disruption of cfp resulted in abolished pathogenicity via normal cuticle infection, attenuated virulence via hemocoel injection, compromised conidiation capacity versus little growth defect, impaired conidial coat, blocked secretion of cuticle-degrading enzymes, impeded proliferation in vivo, disturbed cell cycle, reduced stress tolerance, and 1,818 dysregulated genes (genomic 17.54%). Hundreds of those genes correlated with phenotypic changes observed in the disruption mutant. Intriguingly, nearly 40% of those dysregulated genes encode hypothetical or unknown proteins, and another 13% encode transcription factors and enzymes or proteins collectively involved in genome-wide gene regulation. However, purified CFP showed no DNA-binding activity in an electrophoretic mobility shift assay. These findings unveil that CFP is a novel regulator of fungal insect-pathogenic life cycle and genomic expression and that cysteine richness is dispensable for distinguishing virulence effectors from putative SSPs in B. bassiana IMPORTANCE Small cysteine-rich proteins secreted during plant-pathogenic fungal infection comprise virulence effectors. Our study confirms that only a cysteine-free protein (CFP) is determinant to insect-pathogenic fungal virulence among 10 small putatively secreted proteins containing 0 to 12 Cys residues. Disruption of cfp abolished insect pathogenicity and caused not only a series of compromised cellular events associated with host infection and disease development but also dysregulation of 1,818 genes, although no DNA-binding activity was detected in purified CFP samples. Nearly 13% of those genes encode transcription factors and enzymes or proteins collectively involved in transcriptional regulation. Altogether, CFP serves as a novel regulator of the fungal insect-pathogenic life cycle and genomic expression. Cysteine richness is dispensable for distinguishing virulence effectors from the fungal SSPs.
Copyright © 2021 Mou et al.

Entities:  

Keywords:  entomopathogenic fungi; gene expression and regulation; putative secreted proteins; virulence determinant

Year:  2021        PMID: 33758028     DOI: 10.1128/mSystems.00098-21

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  mSystems        ISSN: 2379-5077            Impact factor:   6.496


  2 in total

1.  Core cysteine residues in the Plasminogen-Apple-Nematode (PAN) domain are critical for HGF/c-MET signaling.

Authors:  Debjani Pal; Kuntal De; Carly M Shanks; Kai Feng; Timothy B Yates; Jennifer Morrell-Falvey; Russell B Davidson; Jerry M Parks; Wellington Muchero
Journal:  Commun Biol       Date:  2022-07-01

2.  Three Small Cysteine-Free Proteins (CFP1-3) Are Required for Insect-Pathogenic Lifestyle of Metarhizium robertsii.

Authors:  Ya-Ni Mou; Kang Ren; Si-Yuan Xu; Sheng-Hua Ying; Ming-Guang Feng
Journal:  J Fungi (Basel)       Date:  2022-06-06
  2 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.