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1.
PLoS Genet ; 14(11): e1007390, 2018 11.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30500812

RÉSUMÉ

The ability to respond to injury is a biological process shared by organisms of different kingdoms that can even result in complete regeneration of a part or structure that was lost. Due to their immobility, multicellular fungi are prey to various predators and are therefore constantly exposed to mechanical damage. Nevertheless, our current knowledge of how fungi respond to injury is scarce. Here we show that activation of injury responses and hyphal regeneration in the filamentous fungus Trichoderma atroviride relies on the detection of two danger or alarm signals. As an early response to injury, we detected a transient increase in cytosolic free calcium ([Ca2+]c) that was promoted by extracellular ATP, and which is likely regulated by a mechanism of calcium-induced calcium-release. In addition, we demonstrate that the mitogen activated protein kinase Tmk1 plays a key role in hyphal regeneration. Calcium- and Tmk1-mediated signaling cascades activated major transcriptional changes early following injury, including induction of a set of regeneration associated genes related to cell signaling, stress responses, transcription regulation, ribosome biogenesis/translation, replication and DNA repair. Interestingly, we uncovered the activation of a putative fungal innate immune response, including the involvement of HET domain genes, known to participate in programmed cell death. Our work shows that fungi and animals share danger-signals, signaling cascades, and the activation of the expression of genes related to immunity after injury, which are likely the result of convergent evolution.


Sujet(s)
Interactions hôte-pathogène , Immunité innée , Mycoses/microbiologie , Régénération , Transduction du signal , Trichoderma/physiologie , Adénosine triphosphate/métabolisme , Animaux , Marqueurs biologiques , Calcium/métabolisme , Régulation de l'expression des gènes fongiques , Hyphae , Mycoses/immunologie
2.
Mycologia ; 105(4): 795-801, 2013.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23709477

RÉSUMÉ

Live-cell imaging with fluorescent protein labeling is providing major new insights into nuclear dynamics in filamentous fungi. With this approach we provide a detailed report of nuclear organization and behavior during mitosis in the bean pathogen Colletotrichum lindemuthianum. Nuclear division and nuclear migration were analyzed in ungerminated conidia, conidial germlings and the mature colony. Ungerminated conidia were uninucleate and completion of mitosis was found not to be essential for germ tube formation, conidial anastomosis tube (CAT) formation or fusion. Nuclei in fused conidial germlings exhibited asynchronous mitoses, and nuclear migration through fused CATs occurred after the nuclei had divided. Different patterns of nuclear division were found in vegetative hyphae of the mature colony. Synchronous, parasynchronous and asynchronous patterns of mitosis were observed in apical hyphal compartments at the colony border, while only synchronous and asynchronous mitoses occurred in subapical hyphal compartments. These findings have revealed unexpected diversity in the patterns of mitosis in different cells of C. lindemuthianum.


Sujet(s)
Division du noyau cellulaire , Colletotrichum/cytologie , Colletotrichum/croissance et développement , Mitose , Spores fongiques/cytologie
3.
PLoS One ; 7(1): e30372, 2012.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22291944

RÉSUMÉ

A key multiprotein complex involved in regulating the actin cytoskeleton and secretory machinery required for polarized growth in fungi, is the polarisome. Recognized core constituents in budding yeast are the proteins Spa2, Pea2, Aip3/Bud6, and the key effector Bni1. Multicellular fungi display a more complex polarized morphogenesis than yeasts, suggesting that the filamentous fungal polarisome might fulfill additional functions. In this study, we compared the subcellular organization and dynamics of the putative polarisome components BUD-6 and BNI-1 with those of the bona fide polarisome marker SPA-2 at various developmental stages of Neurospora crassa. All three proteins exhibited a yeast-like polarisome configuration during polarized germ tube growth, cell fusion, septal pore plugging and tip repolarization. However, the localization patterns of all three proteins showed spatiotemporally distinct characteristics during the establishment of new polar axes, septum formation and cytokinesis, and maintained hyphal tip growth. Most notably, in vegetative hyphal tips BUD-6 accumulated as a subapical cloud excluded from the Spitzenkörper (Spk), whereas BNI-1 and SPA-2 partially colocalized with the Spk and the tip apex. Novel roles during septal plugging and cytokinesis, connected to the reinitiation of tip growth upon physical injury and conidial maturation, were identified for BUD-6 and BNI-1, respectively. Phenotypic analyses of gene deletion mutants revealed additional functions for BUD-6 and BNI-1 in cell fusion regulation, and the maintenance of Spk integrity. Considered together, our findings reveal novel polarisome-independent functions of BUD-6 and BNI-1 in Neurospora, but also suggest that all three proteins cooperate at plugged septal pores, and their complex arrangement within the apical dome of mature hypha might represent a novel aspect of filamentous fungal polarisome architecture.


Sujet(s)
Polarité de la cellule/physiologie , Protéines fongiques/analyse , Protéines des microfilaments/analyse , Microscopie/méthodes , Neurospora crassa/ultrastructure , Fusion cellulaire , Polarité de la cellule/génétique , Cytocinèse/génétique , Cytocinèse/physiologie , Protéines du cytosquelette/analyse , Protéines du cytosquelette/génétique , Protéines du cytosquelette/métabolisme , Protéines fongiques/génétique , Protéines fongiques/métabolisme , Champignons/génétique , Champignons/croissance et développement , Champignons/physiologie , Champignons/ultrastructure , Régulation de l'expression des gènes fongiques , Protéines des microfilaments/génétique , Protéines des microfilaments/métabolisme , Neurospora crassa/génétique , Neurospora crassa/croissance et développement , Neurospora crassa/physiologie , Transport des protéines , Régénération/génétique , Régénération/physiologie , Spores fongiques/génétique , Spores fongiques/métabolisme , Spores fongiques/physiologie , Spores fongiques/ultrastructure , Distribution tissulaire
4.
PLoS One ; 7(2): e31175, 2012.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22319613

RÉSUMÉ

It has been hypothesized that horizontal gene/chromosome transfer and parasexual recombination following hyphal fusion between different strains may contribute to the emergence of wide genetic variability in plant pathogenic and other fungi. However, the significance of vegetative (heterokaryon) incompatibility responses, which commonly result in cell death, in preventing these processes is not known. In this study, we have assessed this issue following different types of hyphal fusion during colony initiation and in the mature colony. We used vegetatively compatible and incompatible strains of the common bean pathogen Colletotrichum lindemuthianum in which nuclei were labelled with either a green or red fluorescent protein in order to microscopically monitor the fates of nuclei and heterokaryotic cells following hyphal fusion. As opposed to fusion of hyphae in mature colonies that resulted in cell death within 3 h, fusions by conidial anastomosis tubes (CAT) between two incompatible strains during colony initiation did not induce the vegetative incompatibility response. Instead, fused conidia and germlings survived and formed heterokaryotic colonies that in turn produced uninucleate conidia that germinated to form colonies with phenotypic features different to those of either parental strain. Our results demonstrate that the vegetative incompatibility response is suppressed during colony initiation in C. lindemuthianum. Thus, CAT fusion may allow asexual fungi to increase their genetic diversity, and to acquire new pathogenic traits.


Sujet(s)
Champignons/génétique , Variation génétique , Plantes/microbiologie , Noyau de la cellule , Transfert horizontal de gène , Hyphae , Spores fongiques
5.
Fungal Biol ; 114(1): 2-9, 2010 Jan.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20965055

RÉSUMÉ

Fusion of conidia and conidial germlings by means of conidial anastomosis tubes (CATs) is a common phenomenon in filamentous fungi, including many plant pathogens. It has a number of different roles, and has been speculated to facilitate parasexual recombination and horizontal gene transfer between species. The bean pathogen Colletotrichum lindemuthianum naturally undergoes CAT fusion on the host surface and within asexual fruiting bodies in anthracnose lesions on its host. It has not been previously possible to analyze the whole process of CAT fusion in this or any other pathogen using live-cell imaging techniques. Here we report the development of a robust protocol for doing this with C. lindemuthianum in vitro. The percentage of conidial germination and CAT fusion was found to be dependent on culture age, media and the fungal strain used. Increased CAT fusion was correlated with reduced germ tube formation. We show time-lapse imaging of the whole process of CAT fusion in C. lindemuthianum for the first time and monitored nuclear migration through fused CATs using nuclei labelled with GFP. CAT fusion in this pathogen was found to exhibit significant differences to that in the model system Neurospora crassa. In contrast to N. crassa, CAT fusion in C. lindemuthianum is inhibited by nutrients (it only occurs in water) and the process takes considerably longer.


Sujet(s)
Colletotrichum/cytologie , Colletotrichum/physiologie , Fabaceae/microbiologie , Maladies des plantes/microbiologie , Spores fongiques/physiologie , Imagerie accélérée/méthodes , Noyau de la cellule/métabolisme , Colletotrichum/génétique , Protéines à fluorescence verte/métabolisme , Microscopie confocale
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