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A conserved fungal glycosyltransferase facilitates pathogenesis of plants by enabling hyphal growth on solid surfaces
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Pathogenic fungi must extend filamentous hyphae across solid surfaces to cause diseases of plants. However, the full inventory of genes which support this is incomplete and many may be currently concealed due to their essentiality for the hyphal growth form. During a random T-DNA mutagenesis screen performed on the pleomorphic wheat (Triticum aestivum) pathogen Zymoseptoria tritici, we acquired a mutant unable to extend hyphae specifically when on solid surfaces. In contrast “yeast-like” growth, and all other growth forms, were unaffected. The inability to extend surface hyphae resulted in a complete loss of virulence on plants. The affected gene encoded a predicted type 2 glycosyltransferase (ZtGT2). Analysis of >800 genomes from taxonomically diverse fungi highlighted a generally widespread, but discontinuous, distribution of ZtGT2 orthologues, and a complete absence of any similar proteins in non-filamentous ascomycete yeasts. Deletion mutants of the ZtGT2 orthologue in the taxonomically un-related fungus Fusarium graminearum were also severely impaired in hyphal growth and non-pathogenic on wheat ears. ZtGT2 expression increased during filamentous growth and electron microscopy on deletion mutants (ΔZtGT2) suggested the protein functions to maintain the outermost surface of the fungal cell wall. Despite this, adhesion to leaf surfaces was unaffected in ΔZtGT2 mutants and global RNAseq-based gene expression profiling highlighted that surface-sensing and protein secretion was also largely unaffected. However, ΔZtGT2 mutants constitutively overexpressed several transmembrane and secreted proteins, including an important LysM-domain chitin-binding virulence effector, Zt3LysM. ZtGT2 likely functions in the synthesis of a currently unknown, potentially minor but widespread, extracellular or outer cell wall polysaccharide which plays a key role in facilitating many interactions between plants and fungi by enabling hyphal growth on solid matrices
When the Tank Is Running Low: Oxygen Targets to Improve Patient Care, Reduce Waste, and Increase Availability
Perioperative Medicine: Efficacy, Safety and Outcom
Simulation of acoustic scattering from an aluminum cylinder near a rough interface using the elastodynamic finite integration technique
We present calculations of acoustic scattering from an aluminum cylinder near a rough interface computed using the elastodynamic finite integration technique (EFIT): a time-domain numerical method useful for pulse propagation in inhomogeneous fluid–elastic environments. These calculations are relevant to the modeling of underwater acoustic scattering by objects near the ocean seafloor in the low-frequency structural-acoustics regime where penetrability of both the object and seafloor are important. The generality of the EFIT allows for the inclusion of stratified seafloors with rough interfaces and volume inhomogeneities such as shells or rocks. Non-reflecting computational boundaries are implemented using a recursive convolution time-domain form of the perfectly matched layer (PML). The scheme and examples discussed are in two space dimensions for computational simplicity. The explicitness of the scheme (unknowns only depend on spatially local values at previous time steps), however, allows for straightforward parallelization by decomposing the domain which is efficient for three-dimensional problems. We first examine the relationship between source geometry and bottom penetration for grazing angles below the critical angle for a fluid–fluid interface similar to a water–sand interface in the ocean. Ensemble averaged bottom penetration is then computed for a statistically rough power–law interface, and comparison is made with the flat-interface case. The aluminum cylinder is then introduced at variable height relative to the fluid–fluid interface, and backscattering is computed for both sub and supercritical incidence angles. Separation of interface reverberation and cylinder echo contributions to the total backscatter is made to demonstrate the importance of roughness. The EFIT is demonstrated to effectively capture the enhancement of bottom penetration and object backscatter for subcritical incidence angles for a buried object under a rough interface. We also consider an example of scattering in the presence of a rough interface and small randomly distributed subsurface inhomogeneities to demonstrate how different environmental factors can influence an echo from an objec
Metabolism and evolution of Haemophilus influenzae deduced from a whole genome comparison with Escherichia coli
BACKGROUND: The 1.83 Megabase (Mb) sequence of the Haemophilus influenzae chromosome, the first completed genome sequence of a cellular life form, has been recently reported. Approximately 75 % of the 4.7 Mb genome sequence of Escherichia coli is also available. The life styles of the two bacteria are very different - H. influenzae is an obligate parasite that lives in human upper respiratory mucosa and can be cultivated only on rich media, whereas E. coli is a saprophyte that can grow on minimal media. A detailed comparison of the protein products encoded by these two genomes is expected to provide valuable insights into bacterial cell physiology and genome evolution.
RESULTS: We describe the results of computer analysis of the amino-acid sequences of 1703 putative proteins encoded by the complete genome of H. influenzae. We detected sequence similarity to proteins in current databases for 92 % of the H. influenzae protein sequences, and at least a general functional prediction was possible for 83 %. A comparison of the H. influenzae protein sequences with those of 3010 proteins encoded by the sequenced 75 % of the E. coli genome revealed 1128 pairs of apparent orthologs, with an average of 59 % identity. In contrast to the high similarity between orthologs, the genome organization and the functional repertoire of genes in the two bacteria were remarkably different. The smaller genome size of H. influenzae is explained, to a large extent, by a reduction in the number of paralogous genes. There was no long range colinearity between the E. coli and H. influenzae gene orders, but over 70 % of the orthologous genes were found in short conserved strings, only about half of which were operons in E. coli. Superposition of the H. influenzae enzyme repertoire upon the known E. coli metabolic pathways allowed us to reconstruct similar and alternative pathways in H. influenzae and provides an explanation for the known nutritional requirements.
CONCLUSIONS: By comparing proteins encoded by the two bacterial genomes, we have shown that extensive gene shuffling and variation in the extent of gene paralogy are major trends in bacterial evolution; this comparison has also allowed us to deduce crucial aspects of the largely uncharacterized metabolism of H. influenzae
Osmotic regulation of the aqpZ water channel gene in E. coli
Osmotic movement of water across bacterial
cell membranes is postulated to be a homeostatic mechanism
for maintaining cell turgor. The molecular water transporter
remained elusive until discovery of the Escherichia coli water
channel, AqpZ, however the regulation of the aqpZ gene
expression and physiological function of the AqpZ protein are
unknown. Northern analysis revealed a transcript of 0.7 kb,
confirming the monocistronic nature of aqpZ. Regulatory
studies performed with an aqpZ::lacZ low copy plasmid demonstrate
enhanced expression during mid-logarithmic
growth, and expression of the gene is dependent upon the
extracellular osmolality, which increased in hypoosmotic environments
but strongly reduced in hyperosmolar NaCl or
KCl. While disruption of the chromosomal aqpZ is not lethal
for E. coli, the colonies of the aqpZ knockout mutant are
smaller than those of the parental wild-type strain. When
cocultured with parental wild-type E. coli, the aqpZ knockout
mutant exhibits markedly reduced colony formation when
grown at 39°C. Similarly, the aqpZ knockout mutant also
exhibits greatly reduced colony formation when grown at low
osmolality, but this phenotype is reversed by overexpression of
AqpZ protein. These results implicate AqpZ as a participant
in the adaptive response of E. coli to hypoosmotic environments
and indicate a requirement for AqpZ by rapidly growing
cells
The Aquaporin-Z water channel gene of Escherichia coli: structure, organization and phylogeny
Aquaporin water channel proteins are found throughout the plant and animal kingdoms, but the first prokaryotic water channel gene, aqpZ, was only recently identified in wild type Escherichia coli (Calamita G et al (1995) J Biol Chem 270, 29063-29066). Here we define the organization of aqpZ in E coli, produce the AqpZ protein and compare the AqpZ phylogeny to that of some known bacterial homologs. Physical mapping and sequence analyses confirmed the location of aqpZ at minute 19.7 on the E coli chromosome where it is transcribed counterclockwise. The monocistronic nature of aqpZ was clearly indicated by the structural organization of its surrounding genes, ybjD and ybjE' and by the presence of a typical Rho-independent transcriptional terminator following the aqpZ stop codon. Computer sequence analysis indicated the -35/-10 region located 72 bases upstream of the aqpZ start codon as the most likely aqpZ promoter. A series of potential cis-regulatory elements were found in the 400 bp region preceding the aqpZ ORF. The AqpZ protein, produced under T7 phi 10 control, showed a size of about 20 kDa by SDS-PAGE. Striking similarities were found between the E coli aqpZ and a gene included in the genome of the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp PCC6803, a species permanently living a fresh water. These results may represent a fundamental step to characterize the regulation and the physiological features of the AqpZ water channel in prokaryotes