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Broad Substrate-Specific Phosphorylation Events Are Associated With the Initial Stage of Plant Cell Wall Recognition in Neurospora crassa

Fungal plant cell wall degradation processes are governed by complex regulatory mechanisms, allowing the organisms to adapt their metabolic program with high specificity to the available substrates. While the uptake of representative plant cell wall mono- and disaccharides is known to induce specifi...

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Autores principales: Horta, Maria Augusta C., Thieme, Nils, Gao, Yuqian, Burnum-Johnson, Kristin E., Nicora, Carrie D., Gritsenko, Marina A., Lipton, Mary S., Mohanraj, Karthikeyan, de Assis, Leandro José, Lin, Liangcai, Tian, Chaoguang, Braus, Gerhard H., Borkovich, Katherine A., Schmoll, Monika, Larrondo, Luis F., Samal, Areejit, Goldman, Gustavo H., Benz, J. Philipp
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6838226/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31736884
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2019.02317
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author Horta, Maria Augusta C.
Thieme, Nils
Gao, Yuqian
Burnum-Johnson, Kristin E.
Nicora, Carrie D.
Gritsenko, Marina A.
Lipton, Mary S.
Mohanraj, Karthikeyan
de Assis, Leandro José
Lin, Liangcai
Tian, Chaoguang
Braus, Gerhard H.
Borkovich, Katherine A.
Schmoll, Monika
Larrondo, Luis F.
Samal, Areejit
Goldman, Gustavo H.
Benz, J. Philipp
author_facet Horta, Maria Augusta C.
Thieme, Nils
Gao, Yuqian
Burnum-Johnson, Kristin E.
Nicora, Carrie D.
Gritsenko, Marina A.
Lipton, Mary S.
Mohanraj, Karthikeyan
de Assis, Leandro José
Lin, Liangcai
Tian, Chaoguang
Braus, Gerhard H.
Borkovich, Katherine A.
Schmoll, Monika
Larrondo, Luis F.
Samal, Areejit
Goldman, Gustavo H.
Benz, J. Philipp
author_sort Horta, Maria Augusta C.
collection PubMed
description Fungal plant cell wall degradation processes are governed by complex regulatory mechanisms, allowing the organisms to adapt their metabolic program with high specificity to the available substrates. While the uptake of representative plant cell wall mono- and disaccharides is known to induce specific transcriptional and translational responses, the processes related to early signal reception and transduction remain largely unknown. A fast and reversible way of signal transmission are post-translational protein modifications, such as phosphorylations, which could initiate rapid adaptations of the fungal metabolism to a new condition. To elucidate how changes in the initial substrate recognition phase of Neurospora crassa affect the global phosphorylation pattern, phospho-proteomics was performed after a short (2 min) induction period with several plant cell wall-related mono- and disaccharides. The MS/MS-based peptide analysis revealed large-scale substrate-specific protein phosphorylation and de-phosphorylations. Using the proteins identified by MS/MS, a protein-protein-interaction (PPI) network was constructed. The variance in phosphorylation of a large number of kinases, phosphatases and transcription factors indicate the participation of many known signaling pathways, including circadian responses, two-component regulatory systems, MAP kinases as well as the cAMP-dependent and heterotrimeric G-protein pathways. Adenylate cyclase, a key component of the cAMP pathway, was identified as a potential hub for carbon source-specific differential protein interactions. In addition, four phosphorylated F-Box proteins were identified, two of which, Fbx-19 and Fbx-22, were found to be involved in carbon catabolite repression responses. Overall, these results provide unprecedented and detailed insights into a so far less well known stage of the fungal response to environmental cues and allow to better elucidate the molecular mechanisms of sensory perception and signal transduction during plant cell wall degradation.
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spelling pubmed-68382262019-11-15 Broad Substrate-Specific Phosphorylation Events Are Associated With the Initial Stage of Plant Cell Wall Recognition in Neurospora crassa Horta, Maria Augusta C. Thieme, Nils Gao, Yuqian Burnum-Johnson, Kristin E. Nicora, Carrie D. Gritsenko, Marina A. Lipton, Mary S. Mohanraj, Karthikeyan de Assis, Leandro José Lin, Liangcai Tian, Chaoguang Braus, Gerhard H. Borkovich, Katherine A. Schmoll, Monika Larrondo, Luis F. Samal, Areejit Goldman, Gustavo H. Benz, J. Philipp Front Microbiol Microbiology Fungal plant cell wall degradation processes are governed by complex regulatory mechanisms, allowing the organisms to adapt their metabolic program with high specificity to the available substrates. While the uptake of representative plant cell wall mono- and disaccharides is known to induce specific transcriptional and translational responses, the processes related to early signal reception and transduction remain largely unknown. A fast and reversible way of signal transmission are post-translational protein modifications, such as phosphorylations, which could initiate rapid adaptations of the fungal metabolism to a new condition. To elucidate how changes in the initial substrate recognition phase of Neurospora crassa affect the global phosphorylation pattern, phospho-proteomics was performed after a short (2 min) induction period with several plant cell wall-related mono- and disaccharides. The MS/MS-based peptide analysis revealed large-scale substrate-specific protein phosphorylation and de-phosphorylations. Using the proteins identified by MS/MS, a protein-protein-interaction (PPI) network was constructed. The variance in phosphorylation of a large number of kinases, phosphatases and transcription factors indicate the participation of many known signaling pathways, including circadian responses, two-component regulatory systems, MAP kinases as well as the cAMP-dependent and heterotrimeric G-protein pathways. Adenylate cyclase, a key component of the cAMP pathway, was identified as a potential hub for carbon source-specific differential protein interactions. In addition, four phosphorylated F-Box proteins were identified, two of which, Fbx-19 and Fbx-22, were found to be involved in carbon catabolite repression responses. Overall, these results provide unprecedented and detailed insights into a so far less well known stage of the fungal response to environmental cues and allow to better elucidate the molecular mechanisms of sensory perception and signal transduction during plant cell wall degradation. Frontiers Media S.A. 2019-11-01 /pmc/articles/PMC6838226/ /pubmed/31736884 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2019.02317 Text en Copyright © 2019 Horta, Thieme, Gao, Burnum-Johnson, Nicora, Gritsenko, Lipton, Mohanraj, de Assis, Lin, Tian, Braus, Borkovich, Schmoll, Larrondo, Samal, Goldman and Benz. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Microbiology
Horta, Maria Augusta C.
Thieme, Nils
Gao, Yuqian
Burnum-Johnson, Kristin E.
Nicora, Carrie D.
Gritsenko, Marina A.
Lipton, Mary S.
Mohanraj, Karthikeyan
de Assis, Leandro José
Lin, Liangcai
Tian, Chaoguang
Braus, Gerhard H.
Borkovich, Katherine A.
Schmoll, Monika
Larrondo, Luis F.
Samal, Areejit
Goldman, Gustavo H.
Benz, J. Philipp
Broad Substrate-Specific Phosphorylation Events Are Associated With the Initial Stage of Plant Cell Wall Recognition in Neurospora crassa
title Broad Substrate-Specific Phosphorylation Events Are Associated With the Initial Stage of Plant Cell Wall Recognition in Neurospora crassa
title_full Broad Substrate-Specific Phosphorylation Events Are Associated With the Initial Stage of Plant Cell Wall Recognition in Neurospora crassa
title_fullStr Broad Substrate-Specific Phosphorylation Events Are Associated With the Initial Stage of Plant Cell Wall Recognition in Neurospora crassa
title_full_unstemmed Broad Substrate-Specific Phosphorylation Events Are Associated With the Initial Stage of Plant Cell Wall Recognition in Neurospora crassa
title_short Broad Substrate-Specific Phosphorylation Events Are Associated With the Initial Stage of Plant Cell Wall Recognition in Neurospora crassa
title_sort broad substrate-specific phosphorylation events are associated with the initial stage of plant cell wall recognition in neurospora crassa
topic Microbiology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6838226/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31736884
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2019.02317
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