{"title":"裂叶属植物交尾信息素中的羧基亚末端芳香残基控制着Bar4受体的特异性识别","authors":"T. Fowler","doi":"10.4148/1941-4765.1068","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Most heterothallic basidiomycetes use small lipopeptide pheromones as part of mate recognition. Schizophyllum commune has scores of pheromones that must be specifically recognized by mating receptors. A correlation between a phenylalanine residue near the C-terminus of several pheromones and the ability of those pheromones to activate receptor Bar4 was recognized. We hypothesized that the phenylalanine residue would be critical for Bar4 activation and tested the hypothesis by making site-directed mutant pheromones and testing these pheromone variants in matings. The data support the hypothesis and add to our understanding of which amino acid residues within pheromones are critical for specific recognition by pheromone receptors. Creative Commons License This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 4.0 License. This regular paper is available in Fungal Genetics Reports: http://newprairiepress.org/fgr/vol57/iss1/2 4 Fungal Genetics Reports A carboxy-subterminal aromatic residue in Schizophyllum commune mating pheromones controls specific recognition by Bar4 receptor Thomas Fowler Department of Biological Sciences, Southern Illinois University Edwardsville, Edwardsville, IL 62026; tfowler@siue.edu Fungal Genetics Reports 57:4-6 Most heterothallic basidiomycetes use small lipopeptide pheromones as part of mate recognition. Schizophyllum commune has scores of pheromones that must be specifically recognized by mating receptors. A correlation between a phenylalanine residue near the Cterminus of several pheromones and the ability of those pheromones to activate receptor Bar4 was recognized. We hypothesized that the phenylalanine residue would be critical for Bar4 activation and tested the hypothesis by making site-directed mutant pheromones and testing these pheromone variants in matings. The data support the hypothesis and add to our understanding of which amino acid residues within pheromones are critical for specific recognition by pheromone receptors. Many of the Agaricomycotina fungi express quite a few mating pheromones and seven-transmembrane-domain pheromone receptors (most recently reviewed by Raudaskoski and Kothe, 2010). A large number of lipopeptide mating pheromones are coded species-wide by Schizophyllum commune, but any individual has genes for only a small subset of the species’ estimated 80–100 pheromones. More than twenty of the genes that encode these pheromones have been cloned and sequenced (for list and references, see Table 3 in Fowler et al., 2004). One attempt at classifying these pheromones placed them into five groups according to similarity of the predicted mature pheromones’ amino acid sequences (Fowler et al., 2004). The subsets of receptors activated by the pheromones follow a pattern that closely correlates with pheromone groups arranged by sequence similarity. Three pheromone groups (III, IV,V) arranged by similarity activate three completely distinct sets of receptors. The remaining two pheromone groups (I and II) also had corresponding receptors that were distinctly activated only by pheromones within their respective groups, with one exception: pheromone receptor Bar4 is activated by pheromone Bap3(1) from group I and by pheromones Bap3(3) and Bbp2(6) from group II (Table 1). Comparison of the amino acid sequences of group I and II pheromones showed that all five group I pheromones had tryptophan (W) in the carboxysubterminal position except pheromone Bap3(1), which has phenylalanine (F) in the carboxy-subterminal position and can activate receptor Bar4. Both group II pheromones also have F in the carboxy-subterminal position. For all seven wild-type pheromones of groups I and II that have been characterized, pheromones with F in the carboxy-subterminal position can activate Bar4 and pheromones with W in that position cannot activate Bar4 (Fowler et al., 2004). We wondered if that single F residue could be the key to recognition as an activating ligand by Bar4. In other tests for critical amino acid residues within fungal lipopeptide mating pheromones, single amino acids have been crucial. One amino acid in a pheromone can determine activation or failure of activation of a receptor, or produce activity with a different receptor without losing the original pheromone activity (Olesnicky et al., 2000; Fowler et al., 2001). We are interested in the rules and patterns that govern pheromone and pheromone receptor interactions. Table 1. Wild-type and mutant pheromone sequences and activities Group Name Predicted Pheromone Receptors Activated Wild-type pheromones I Bap3(1) ERVGTGGTATAFC Bar2, Bar4, Bar5 II Bap3(3) ERHGSGNMTYFC Bar4, Bar7, Bbr8 II Bbp2(6) EREGDGNMTYFC Bar4, Bar7, Bbr8 I Bap1(1)r EREGGSDCTAWC Bar2, Bar3, Bar5, Bar6 Mutant pheromones I Bap3(1)F54Y ERVGTGGTATAYC Bar2, Bar4, Bar5 I Bap3(1)F54W ERVGTGGTATAWC Bar2, Bar5 I Bap1(1)rW30F EREGGSDCTAFC Bar2, Bar3, Bar4, Bar5 All pheromones of S. commune are cleaved from larger precursors and are predicted to be carboxymethylated and farnesylated on the C-terminal cysteine residue (see review of Raudaskoski and Kothe, 2010). Receptors Bar1 though Bar9 were each tested individually. Tester strains in order from Bar1 to Bar9 were: V151-20, T26, V160-21, V147-1, V112-17, V123-29, V119-19, V142-3, V118-7. Addition Bar4 tester V131-5 was also used. To test whether the subterminal F is a key residue for Bar4 activation by pheromones from groups I and II, site-directed changes in codons for the subterminal residues, codons 30 and 54, were made in two pheromone genes, bap1(1)r and bap3(1), respectively, using the Quik-change oligonucleotide-based site-directed mutagenesis kit (Stratagene, La Jolla, CA; Kothe, 1999; Fowler et al., 2004). Oligonucleotide primers used in this study are shown in Table 2. The plasmid templates for mutagenesis, containing a genomic copy Published by New Prairie Press, 2017","PeriodicalId":12490,"journal":{"name":"Fungal Genetics Reports","volume":"4 1","pages":"4-6"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2010-12-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"2","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"A carboxy-subterminal aromatic residue in Schizophyllum commune mating pheromones controls specific recognition by Bar4 receptor\",\"authors\":\"T. Fowler\",\"doi\":\"10.4148/1941-4765.1068\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"Most heterothallic basidiomycetes use small lipopeptide pheromones as part of mate recognition. Schizophyllum commune has scores of pheromones that must be specifically recognized by mating receptors. A correlation between a phenylalanine residue near the C-terminus of several pheromones and the ability of those pheromones to activate receptor Bar4 was recognized. We hypothesized that the phenylalanine residue would be critical for Bar4 activation and tested the hypothesis by making site-directed mutant pheromones and testing these pheromone variants in matings. The data support the hypothesis and add to our understanding of which amino acid residues within pheromones are critical for specific recognition by pheromone receptors. Creative Commons License This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 4.0 License. This regular paper is available in Fungal Genetics Reports: http://newprairiepress.org/fgr/vol57/iss1/2 4 Fungal Genetics Reports A carboxy-subterminal aromatic residue in Schizophyllum commune mating pheromones controls specific recognition by Bar4 receptor Thomas Fowler Department of Biological Sciences, Southern Illinois University Edwardsville, Edwardsville, IL 62026; tfowler@siue.edu Fungal Genetics Reports 57:4-6 Most heterothallic basidiomycetes use small lipopeptide pheromones as part of mate recognition. Schizophyllum commune has scores of pheromones that must be specifically recognized by mating receptors. A correlation between a phenylalanine residue near the Cterminus of several pheromones and the ability of those pheromones to activate receptor Bar4 was recognized. We hypothesized that the phenylalanine residue would be critical for Bar4 activation and tested the hypothesis by making site-directed mutant pheromones and testing these pheromone variants in matings. The data support the hypothesis and add to our understanding of which amino acid residues within pheromones are critical for specific recognition by pheromone receptors. Many of the Agaricomycotina fungi express quite a few mating pheromones and seven-transmembrane-domain pheromone receptors (most recently reviewed by Raudaskoski and Kothe, 2010). A large number of lipopeptide mating pheromones are coded species-wide by Schizophyllum commune, but any individual has genes for only a small subset of the species’ estimated 80–100 pheromones. More than twenty of the genes that encode these pheromones have been cloned and sequenced (for list and references, see Table 3 in Fowler et al., 2004). One attempt at classifying these pheromones placed them into five groups according to similarity of the predicted mature pheromones’ amino acid sequences (Fowler et al., 2004). The subsets of receptors activated by the pheromones follow a pattern that closely correlates with pheromone groups arranged by sequence similarity. Three pheromone groups (III, IV,V) arranged by similarity activate three completely distinct sets of receptors. The remaining two pheromone groups (I and II) also had corresponding receptors that were distinctly activated only by pheromones within their respective groups, with one exception: pheromone receptor Bar4 is activated by pheromone Bap3(1) from group I and by pheromones Bap3(3) and Bbp2(6) from group II (Table 1). Comparison of the amino acid sequences of group I and II pheromones showed that all five group I pheromones had tryptophan (W) in the carboxysubterminal position except pheromone Bap3(1), which has phenylalanine (F) in the carboxy-subterminal position and can activate receptor Bar4. Both group II pheromones also have F in the carboxy-subterminal position. For all seven wild-type pheromones of groups I and II that have been characterized, pheromones with F in the carboxy-subterminal position can activate Bar4 and pheromones with W in that position cannot activate Bar4 (Fowler et al., 2004). We wondered if that single F residue could be the key to recognition as an activating ligand by Bar4. In other tests for critical amino acid residues within fungal lipopeptide mating pheromones, single amino acids have been crucial. One amino acid in a pheromone can determine activation or failure of activation of a receptor, or produce activity with a different receptor without losing the original pheromone activity (Olesnicky et al., 2000; Fowler et al., 2001). We are interested in the rules and patterns that govern pheromone and pheromone receptor interactions. Table 1. Wild-type and mutant pheromone sequences and activities Group Name Predicted Pheromone Receptors Activated Wild-type pheromones I Bap3(1) ERVGTGGTATAFC Bar2, Bar4, Bar5 II Bap3(3) ERHGSGNMTYFC Bar4, Bar7, Bbr8 II Bbp2(6) EREGDGNMTYFC Bar4, Bar7, Bbr8 I Bap1(1)r EREGGSDCTAWC Bar2, Bar3, Bar5, Bar6 Mutant pheromones I Bap3(1)F54Y ERVGTGGTATAYC Bar2, Bar4, Bar5 I Bap3(1)F54W ERVGTGGTATAWC Bar2, Bar5 I Bap1(1)rW30F EREGGSDCTAFC Bar2, Bar3, Bar4, Bar5 All pheromones of S. commune are cleaved from larger precursors and are predicted to be carboxymethylated and farnesylated on the C-terminal cysteine residue (see review of Raudaskoski and Kothe, 2010). Receptors Bar1 though Bar9 were each tested individually. Tester strains in order from Bar1 to Bar9 were: V151-20, T26, V160-21, V147-1, V112-17, V123-29, V119-19, V142-3, V118-7. Addition Bar4 tester V131-5 was also used. To test whether the subterminal F is a key residue for Bar4 activation by pheromones from groups I and II, site-directed changes in codons for the subterminal residues, codons 30 and 54, were made in two pheromone genes, bap1(1)r and bap3(1), respectively, using the Quik-change oligonucleotide-based site-directed mutagenesis kit (Stratagene, La Jolla, CA; Kothe, 1999; Fowler et al., 2004). Oligonucleotide primers used in this study are shown in Table 2. 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引用次数: 2
摘要
大多数担子菌使用小脂肽信息素作为配偶识别的一部分。裂叶植物群落有大量的信息素,这些信息素必须被交配受体特异性识别。一些信息素c端附近的苯丙氨酸残基与这些信息素激活受体Bar4的能力之间存在相关性。我们假设苯丙氨酸残基对Bar4的激活至关重要,并通过制造定点突变信息素和在交配中测试这些信息素变体来验证这一假设。这些数据支持了这一假设,并增加了我们对信息素中哪些氨基酸残基对信息素受体的特异性识别至关重要的理解。本作品采用知识共享署名-相同方式共享4.0许可协议。这篇常规的论文可在真菌遗传学报告:http://newprairiepress.org/fgr/vol57/iss1/2 4真菌遗传学报告Schizophyllum commune交配信息素中的羧基亚末端芳香残基控制Bar4受体的特异性识别;tfowler@siue.edu真菌遗传学报告57:4-6大多数异thallic担子菌使用小脂肽信息素作为配偶识别的一部分。裂叶植物群落有大量的信息素,这些信息素必须被交配受体特异性识别。在几种信息素的Cterminus附近的苯丙氨酸残基与这些信息素激活受体Bar4的能力之间存在相关性。我们假设苯丙氨酸残基对Bar4的激活至关重要,并通过制造定点突变信息素和在交配中测试这些信息素变体来验证这一假设。这些数据支持了这一假设,并增加了我们对信息素中哪些氨基酸残基对信息素受体的特异性识别至关重要的理解。许多Agaricomycotina真菌表达相当多的交配信息素和七种跨膜域信息素受体(Raudaskoski和Kothe, 2010年最近进行了综述)。在裂叶植物群落中,大量的脂肽交配信息素在物种范围内被编码,但任何个体都只有物种估计的80-100个信息素的一小部分基因。编码这些信息素的基因有20多个已被克隆和测序(列表和参考文献见Fowler et al., 2004的表3)。根据预测的成熟信息素氨基酸序列的相似性,将这些信息素分为五组(Fowler et al., 2004)。被信息素激活的受体亚群遵循一种模式,这种模式与按序列相似性排列的信息素群密切相关。按相似性排列的三个信息素组(III, IV,V)激活三组完全不同的受体。剩下的两个信息素组(I和II)也有相应的受体,它们只被各自组内的信息素明显激活,只有一个例外:信息素受体Bar4被来自I族的信息素Bap3(1)和来自II族的信息素Bap3(3)和Bbp2(6)激活(表1)。比较I族和II族信息素的氨基酸序列发现,除了信息素Bap3(1)在羧基亚末端具有苯丙氨酸(F)外,所有I族信息素在羧基亚末端都含有色氨酸(W),并能激活受体Bar4。这两种II族信息素在羧基亚末端位置也有F。在已鉴定的I和II类的7种野生型信息素中,羧基亚末端位置为F的信息素可以激活Bar4,而羧基亚末端位置为W的信息素不能激活Bar4 (Fowler et al., 2004)。我们想知道单个F残基是否可能是Bar4识别为激活配体的关键。在真菌脂肽交配信息素内的其他关键氨基酸残基测试中,单个氨基酸是至关重要的。信息素中的一个氨基酸可以决定受体激活或失败,或者在不失去原始信息素活性的情况下与不同的受体产生活性(Olesnicky等人,2000;Fowler et al., 2001)。我们感兴趣的是控制信息素和信息素受体相互作用的规则和模式。表1。野生型和突变型信息素序列和活性组名称预测信息素受体激活野生型信息素I Bap3(1) ERVGTGGTATAFC Bar2, Bar4, Bar5 II Bap3(3) ERHGSGNMTYFC Bar4, Bar7, Bbr8 II Bbp2(6) EREGDGNMTYFC Bar4, Bar7, Bbr8 I Bap1(1)r EREGGSDCTAWC Bar2, Bar4, Bar5, Bar6突变型信息素I Bap3(1)F54Y ERVGTGGTATAYC Bar2, Bar4, Bar5 I Bap3(1)F54W ERVGTGGTATAYC Bar2, Bar5 I Bap1(1)rW30F EREGGSDCTAFC Bar2, Bar3, Bar4, Bar5
A carboxy-subterminal aromatic residue in Schizophyllum commune mating pheromones controls specific recognition by Bar4 receptor
Most heterothallic basidiomycetes use small lipopeptide pheromones as part of mate recognition. Schizophyllum commune has scores of pheromones that must be specifically recognized by mating receptors. A correlation between a phenylalanine residue near the C-terminus of several pheromones and the ability of those pheromones to activate receptor Bar4 was recognized. We hypothesized that the phenylalanine residue would be critical for Bar4 activation and tested the hypothesis by making site-directed mutant pheromones and testing these pheromone variants in matings. The data support the hypothesis and add to our understanding of which amino acid residues within pheromones are critical for specific recognition by pheromone receptors. Creative Commons License This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 4.0 License. This regular paper is available in Fungal Genetics Reports: http://newprairiepress.org/fgr/vol57/iss1/2 4 Fungal Genetics Reports A carboxy-subterminal aromatic residue in Schizophyllum commune mating pheromones controls specific recognition by Bar4 receptor Thomas Fowler Department of Biological Sciences, Southern Illinois University Edwardsville, Edwardsville, IL 62026; tfowler@siue.edu Fungal Genetics Reports 57:4-6 Most heterothallic basidiomycetes use small lipopeptide pheromones as part of mate recognition. Schizophyllum commune has scores of pheromones that must be specifically recognized by mating receptors. A correlation between a phenylalanine residue near the Cterminus of several pheromones and the ability of those pheromones to activate receptor Bar4 was recognized. We hypothesized that the phenylalanine residue would be critical for Bar4 activation and tested the hypothesis by making site-directed mutant pheromones and testing these pheromone variants in matings. The data support the hypothesis and add to our understanding of which amino acid residues within pheromones are critical for specific recognition by pheromone receptors. Many of the Agaricomycotina fungi express quite a few mating pheromones and seven-transmembrane-domain pheromone receptors (most recently reviewed by Raudaskoski and Kothe, 2010). A large number of lipopeptide mating pheromones are coded species-wide by Schizophyllum commune, but any individual has genes for only a small subset of the species’ estimated 80–100 pheromones. More than twenty of the genes that encode these pheromones have been cloned and sequenced (for list and references, see Table 3 in Fowler et al., 2004). One attempt at classifying these pheromones placed them into five groups according to similarity of the predicted mature pheromones’ amino acid sequences (Fowler et al., 2004). The subsets of receptors activated by the pheromones follow a pattern that closely correlates with pheromone groups arranged by sequence similarity. Three pheromone groups (III, IV,V) arranged by similarity activate three completely distinct sets of receptors. The remaining two pheromone groups (I and II) also had corresponding receptors that were distinctly activated only by pheromones within their respective groups, with one exception: pheromone receptor Bar4 is activated by pheromone Bap3(1) from group I and by pheromones Bap3(3) and Bbp2(6) from group II (Table 1). Comparison of the amino acid sequences of group I and II pheromones showed that all five group I pheromones had tryptophan (W) in the carboxysubterminal position except pheromone Bap3(1), which has phenylalanine (F) in the carboxy-subterminal position and can activate receptor Bar4. Both group II pheromones also have F in the carboxy-subterminal position. For all seven wild-type pheromones of groups I and II that have been characterized, pheromones with F in the carboxy-subterminal position can activate Bar4 and pheromones with W in that position cannot activate Bar4 (Fowler et al., 2004). We wondered if that single F residue could be the key to recognition as an activating ligand by Bar4. In other tests for critical amino acid residues within fungal lipopeptide mating pheromones, single amino acids have been crucial. One amino acid in a pheromone can determine activation or failure of activation of a receptor, or produce activity with a different receptor without losing the original pheromone activity (Olesnicky et al., 2000; Fowler et al., 2001). We are interested in the rules and patterns that govern pheromone and pheromone receptor interactions. Table 1. Wild-type and mutant pheromone sequences and activities Group Name Predicted Pheromone Receptors Activated Wild-type pheromones I Bap3(1) ERVGTGGTATAFC Bar2, Bar4, Bar5 II Bap3(3) ERHGSGNMTYFC Bar4, Bar7, Bbr8 II Bbp2(6) EREGDGNMTYFC Bar4, Bar7, Bbr8 I Bap1(1)r EREGGSDCTAWC Bar2, Bar3, Bar5, Bar6 Mutant pheromones I Bap3(1)F54Y ERVGTGGTATAYC Bar2, Bar4, Bar5 I Bap3(1)F54W ERVGTGGTATAWC Bar2, Bar5 I Bap1(1)rW30F EREGGSDCTAFC Bar2, Bar3, Bar4, Bar5 All pheromones of S. commune are cleaved from larger precursors and are predicted to be carboxymethylated and farnesylated on the C-terminal cysteine residue (see review of Raudaskoski and Kothe, 2010). Receptors Bar1 though Bar9 were each tested individually. Tester strains in order from Bar1 to Bar9 were: V151-20, T26, V160-21, V147-1, V112-17, V123-29, V119-19, V142-3, V118-7. Addition Bar4 tester V131-5 was also used. To test whether the subterminal F is a key residue for Bar4 activation by pheromones from groups I and II, site-directed changes in codons for the subterminal residues, codons 30 and 54, were made in two pheromone genes, bap1(1)r and bap3(1), respectively, using the Quik-change oligonucleotide-based site-directed mutagenesis kit (Stratagene, La Jolla, CA; Kothe, 1999; Fowler et al., 2004). Oligonucleotide primers used in this study are shown in Table 2. The plasmid templates for mutagenesis, containing a genomic copy Published by New Prairie Press, 2017