High diversity of polyketide synthase genes and the melanin biosynthesis gene cluster in Penicillium marneffei
FEBS J. 2010 Aug 13. [Epub ahead of print]
High diversity of polyketide synthase genes and the
melanin biosynthesis gene cluster in Penicillium
marneffei.
Woo PC, Tam EW, Chong KT, Cai JJ, Tung ET, Ngan AH, Lau SK, Yuen
KY.
Despite the unique phenotypic properties and clinical importance
of Penicillium marneffei, the polyketide synthase genes in its
genome have never been characterized. Twenty-three putative
polyketide synthase genes and two putative polyketide synthase
nonribosomal peptide-synthase hybrid genes were identified in the
P. marneffei genome, a diversity much higher than found in other
pathogenic thermal dimorphic fungi, such as Histoplasma capsulatum
(one polyketide synthase gene) and Coccidioides immitis (10
polyketide synthase genes). These genes were evenly distributed on
the phylogenetic tree with polyketide synthase genes of Aspergillus
and other fungi, indicating that the high diversity was not a
result of lineage-specific gene expansion through recent gene
duplication. The melanin-biosynthesis gene cluster had gene order
and orientations identical to those in the Talaromyces stipitatus
(a teleomorph of Penicillium emmonsii) genome. Phylogenetically,
all six genes of the melanin-biosynthesis gene cluster in P.
marneffei were also most closely related to those in T. stipitatus,
with high bootstrap supports. The polyketide synthase gene of the
melanin-biosynthesis gene cluster (alb1) in P. marneffei was
knocked down, which was accompanied by loss of melanin pigment
production and reduced ornamentation in conidia. The survival of
mice challenged with the alb1 knockdown mutant was significantly
better than those challenged with wild-type P. marneffei (P <
0.005). The sterilizing doses of hydrogen peroxide, leading to a
50% reduction in survival of conidia, were 11 min for wild-type P.
marneffei and 6 min for the alb1 knockdown mutant of P. marneffei,
implying that the melanin-biosynthesis gene cluster contributed to
virulence through decreased susceptibility to killing by hydrogen
peroxide.
PMID: 20718860 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]
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