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The Transcriptomic Signature of RacA Activation and Inactivation Provides New Insights into the Morphogenetic Network of Aspergillus niger

RacA is the main Rho GTPase in Aspergillus niger regulating polarity maintenance via controlling actin dynamics. Both deletion and dominant activation of RacA (Rac(G18V)) provoke an actin localization defect and thereby loss of polarized tip extension, resulting in frequent dichotomous branching in...

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Autores principales: Kwon, Min Jin, Nitsche, Benjamin M., Arentshorst, Mark, Jørgensen, Thomas R., Ram, Arthur F. J., Meyer, Vera
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3722221/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23894378
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0068946
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author Kwon, Min Jin
Nitsche, Benjamin M.
Arentshorst, Mark
Jørgensen, Thomas R.
Ram, Arthur F. J.
Meyer, Vera
author_facet Kwon, Min Jin
Nitsche, Benjamin M.
Arentshorst, Mark
Jørgensen, Thomas R.
Ram, Arthur F. J.
Meyer, Vera
author_sort Kwon, Min Jin
collection PubMed
description RacA is the main Rho GTPase in Aspergillus niger regulating polarity maintenance via controlling actin dynamics. Both deletion and dominant activation of RacA (Rac(G18V)) provoke an actin localization defect and thereby loss of polarized tip extension, resulting in frequent dichotomous branching in the ΔracA strain and an apolar growing phenotype for Rac(G18V). In the current study the transcriptomics and physiological consequences of these morphological changes were investigated and compared with the data of the morphogenetic network model for the dichotomous branching mutant ramosa-1. This integrated approach revealed that polar tip growth is most likely orchestrated by the concerted activities of phospholipid signaling, sphingolipid signaling, TORC2 signaling, calcium signaling and CWI signaling pathways. The transcriptomic signatures and the reconstructed network model for all three morphology mutants (ΔracA, Rac(G18V), ramosa-1) imply that these pathways become integrated to bring about different physiological adaptations including changes in sterol, zinc and amino acid metabolism and changes in ion transport and protein trafficking. Finally, the fate of exocytotic (SncA) and endocytotic (AbpA, SlaB) markers in the dichotomous branching mutant ΔracA was followed, demonstrating that hyperbranching does not per se result in increased protein secretion.
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spelling pubmed-37222212013-07-26 The Transcriptomic Signature of RacA Activation and Inactivation Provides New Insights into the Morphogenetic Network of Aspergillus niger Kwon, Min Jin Nitsche, Benjamin M. Arentshorst, Mark Jørgensen, Thomas R. Ram, Arthur F. J. Meyer, Vera PLoS One Research Article RacA is the main Rho GTPase in Aspergillus niger regulating polarity maintenance via controlling actin dynamics. Both deletion and dominant activation of RacA (Rac(G18V)) provoke an actin localization defect and thereby loss of polarized tip extension, resulting in frequent dichotomous branching in the ΔracA strain and an apolar growing phenotype for Rac(G18V). In the current study the transcriptomics and physiological consequences of these morphological changes were investigated and compared with the data of the morphogenetic network model for the dichotomous branching mutant ramosa-1. This integrated approach revealed that polar tip growth is most likely orchestrated by the concerted activities of phospholipid signaling, sphingolipid signaling, TORC2 signaling, calcium signaling and CWI signaling pathways. The transcriptomic signatures and the reconstructed network model for all three morphology mutants (ΔracA, Rac(G18V), ramosa-1) imply that these pathways become integrated to bring about different physiological adaptations including changes in sterol, zinc and amino acid metabolism and changes in ion transport and protein trafficking. Finally, the fate of exocytotic (SncA) and endocytotic (AbpA, SlaB) markers in the dichotomous branching mutant ΔracA was followed, demonstrating that hyperbranching does not per se result in increased protein secretion. Public Library of Science 2013-07-24 /pmc/articles/PMC3722221/ /pubmed/23894378 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0068946 Text en © 2013 Kwon et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Kwon, Min Jin
Nitsche, Benjamin M.
Arentshorst, Mark
Jørgensen, Thomas R.
Ram, Arthur F. J.
Meyer, Vera
The Transcriptomic Signature of RacA Activation and Inactivation Provides New Insights into the Morphogenetic Network of Aspergillus niger
title The Transcriptomic Signature of RacA Activation and Inactivation Provides New Insights into the Morphogenetic Network of Aspergillus niger
title_full The Transcriptomic Signature of RacA Activation and Inactivation Provides New Insights into the Morphogenetic Network of Aspergillus niger
title_fullStr The Transcriptomic Signature of RacA Activation and Inactivation Provides New Insights into the Morphogenetic Network of Aspergillus niger
title_full_unstemmed The Transcriptomic Signature of RacA Activation and Inactivation Provides New Insights into the Morphogenetic Network of Aspergillus niger
title_short The Transcriptomic Signature of RacA Activation and Inactivation Provides New Insights into the Morphogenetic Network of Aspergillus niger
title_sort transcriptomic signature of raca activation and inactivation provides new insights into the morphogenetic network of aspergillus niger
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3722221/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23894378
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0068946
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