Abstract

ABSTRACTFungal secondary metabolites with antibiotic activities can promote fungal adaptation to diverse environments. Besides the global regulator, individual biosynthetic gene clusters (BGCs) usually contain a pathway-specific transcription factor for the tight regulation of fungal secondary metabolism. Here, we report the chemical biology mediated by a supercluster containing three BGCs in the entomopathogenic fungus Metarhizium robertsii. These clusters are jointly controlled by an embedded transcription factor that orchestrates the collective production of four classes of chemicals: ustilaginoidin, indigotide, pseurotin, and hydroxyl-ovalicin. The ustilaginoidin BGC is implicated as a late-acquired cluster in Metarhizium to produce both the bis-naphtho-γ-pyrones and the monomeric naphtho-γ-pyrone glycosides (i.e., indigotides). We found that the biosynthesis of indigotides additionally requires the functions of paired methylglucosylation genes located outside the supercluster. The pseurotin/ovalicin BGCs are blended and mesosyntenically conserved to the intertwined pseurotin/fumagillin BGCs of Aspergillus fumigatus. However, the former have lost a few genes, including a polyketide synthase gene responsible for the production of a pentaene chain used for assembly with ovalicin to form fumagillin, as observed in A. fumigatus. The collective production of chemical cocktails by this supercluster was dispensable for fungal virulence against insects and could enable the fungus to combat different bacteria better than the metabolite(s) produced by an individual BGC could. Thus, our results unveil a novel strategy employed by fungi to manage chemical ecology against diverse bacteria.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call