Abstract

Fusarium graminearum is an important wheat pathogen and a producer of deoxynivalenol (DON). Biosynthesis of DON is suppressed by ammonium and induced by arginine and polyamines. To better understand ammonium repression of DON biosynthesis, in this study, we functionally characterized three ammonium permease (MEP) genes in F. graminearum. All the mep deletion mutants were normal in growth on V8 agar. Whereas deletion of MEP1 had no detectable phenotypes, the mep2 and mep3 mutants had defects in hyphal growth under ammonium limiting conditions and infection of wheat heads, with the latter having less severe defects. Deletion of MEP2 but not MEP3 affected nitrogen repression of DON biosynthesis and genes involved in nitrate metabolism. The mep2 mep3 double mutant had more severe defects in nitrogen repression than the mep2 mutant and was defective in ascospore releasing. Mutant alleles of MEP2 with truncated C-terminal cytoplasmic tail (CT) failed to complement the mep2 mutant. Expression of a dominant active allele of RAS2 partially rescued the defects of mep2 in nitrogen repression. Taken together, these results suggest that Mep2 acts as the major sensor of ammonium availability in F. graminearum and its CT region functions in nitrogen repression via RAS2 and downstream signalling pathways.

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