Abstract

Inducer of meiosis 2 (Ime2), a protein kinase that has been identified in diverse fungal species, functions in the regulation of various cellular processes, such as ascospore formation, pseudohyphal growth, and sexual reproduction. In this study, AoIme2, an ortholog of Saccharomyces cerevisiae Ime2, was characterized in the nematode-trapping fungus Arthrobotrys oligospora. Disruption of the gene Aoime2 caused defective growth, with slower mycelial growth in ΔAoime2 mutants than the wild type (WT) strain, and in the mutants, the number of hyphal septa in mycelia was higher and the number of cell nuclei in mycelia and conidia was considerably lower than in the WT strain. The conidial yields of the ΔAoime2 mutants were decreased by ∼33% relative to the WT strain, and the transcription of several sporulation-related genes, including abaA, fluG, rodA, aspB, velB, and vosA, was markedly downregulated during the conidiation stage. The ΔAoime2 mutants were highly sensitive to the osmotic stressors NaCl and sorbitol, and the cell wall of partial hyphae in the mutants was deformed. Further examination revealed that the cell wall of the traps produced by ΔAoime2 mutants became loose, and that the electron-dense bodies in trap cells were also few than in the WT strain. Moreover, Aoime2 disruption caused a reduction in trap formation and serine-protease production, and most hyphal traps produced by ΔAoime2 mutants did not form an intact hyphal loop; consequently, substantially fewer nematodes were captured by the mutants than by the WT strain. In summary, an Ime2-MAPK is identified here for the first time from a nematode-trapping fungus, and the kinase is shown to be involved in the regulation of mycelial growth and development, conidiation, osmolarity, and pathogenicity in A. oligospora.

Highlights

  • Mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) cascades function as key intracellular signal transducers that use protein phosphorylation/dephosphorylation cycles to transmit information, and orthologous MAPK signaling modules in yeast and filamentous fungi have been found to be involved in regulating mating, filament growth, hyperosmotic-stress response, cell-wall integrity (CWI), and spore-wall assembly (Xu, 2000; Zhao et al, 2007; Rispail et al, 2009)

  • inducer of meiosis 2 (Ime2) orthologs from different fungi are clustered in Clade A, with the Ime2 orthologs from NT fungi being clustered in Subclade A-II; the classic MAPK-family members from different fungi are clustered in Clade B, which is further divided into three subclades: Fus3, Slt2, and Hog1 (Supplementary Figure S1)

  • The phosphorylation-site sequences in orthologous Fus3 and Slt2 are both “-TEY-”, the sequence in Hog1 is “-TGY-”, and that in Ime2 from different fungi is “-TTY-” except in the case of ScIme2 (Supplementary Figure S2)

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Summary

Introduction

Mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) cascades function as key intracellular signal transducers that use protein phosphorylation/dephosphorylation cycles to transmit information, and orthologous MAPK signaling modules in yeast and filamentous fungi have been found to be involved in regulating mating, filament growth, hyperosmotic-stress response, cell-wall integrity (CWI), and spore-wall assembly (Xu, 2000; Zhao et al, 2007; Rispail et al, 2009). MAPK is generally activated by phosphorylation at the well-conserved threonine-x-tyrosine (TXY) motif by MAPK kinase (MAPKK), which is in turn activated by MAPKK kinase (MAPKKK) (Yang et al, 2003; Jiang et al, 2018). These MAPKKK–MAPKK–MAPK cascades are evolutionarily conserved in eukaryotes (Herskowitz, 1995; Schaeffer and Weber, 1999). Ime homologs are conserved in in fungi, and all eukaryotic taxa examined (Krylov et al, 2003), and the common feature of these kinases is that their N-terminal region harbors a TXY motif, which is typically found in the activation loop of MAPKs (Payne et al, 1991)

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