Photostimulation of Hypocrea atroviridis growth occurs due to a cross-talk of carbon metabolism, blue light receptors and response to oxidative stress
- 1 April 2008
- journal article
- Published by Microbiology Society in Microbiology
- Vol. 154 (4) , 1229-1241
- https://doi.org/10.1099/mic.0.2007/014175-0
Abstract
Light is a fundamental abiotic factor which stimulates growth and development of the majority of living organisms. In soil saprotrophic fungi, light is primarily known to influence morphogenesis, particularly sexual and asexual spore formation. Here we present a new function of light, the enhancement of mycelial growth. The photostimulated mycelial growth of the soil fungus Hypocrea atroviridis was detected on 17 (out of 95 tested carbon sources) carbohydrates and polyols, which are metabolically related to cellulose and hemicelluloses, and which are mainly available in the upper soil litter layer. This stimulation depends differently on the function of the two blue light receptor proteins BLR-1 and BLR-2, respectively, BLR-1 being responsible for carbon source selectivity and response to permanent light. Evocation of oxidative stress response in darkness imitates the photostimulation on nine of these carbon sources, and this effect was fully dependent on the function of BLR-1. We conclude that light in combination with the availability of litter-specific carbon sources serves as a signal for the fungus to be above ground, thereby stimulating fast growth in order to produce a maximum of propagules in the shortest time. We further deduce that this process involves oxidative stress response and the two blue light receptor proteins BLR-1 and BLR-2, the former playing the major role.Keywords
This publication has 47 references indexed in Scilit:
- Fungal photoreceptors: sensory molecules for fungal development and behaviourPhotochemical & Photobiological Sciences, 2007
- Global Carbon Utilization Profiles of Wild-Type, Mutant, and Transformant Strains of Hypocrea jecorinaApplied and Environmental Microbiology, 2006
- Cross Talk between a Fungal Blue-Light Perception System and the Cyclic AMP Signaling PathwayEukaryotic Cell, 2006
- Effects of repeated low‐dose UVB irradiation on the hyphal growth of Candida albicansMycoses, 2005
- Transcriptional regulation of plant cell wall degradation by filamentous fungiPublished by Oxford University Press (OUP) ,2005
- BLR-1 and BLR-2, key regulatory elements of photoconidiation and mycelial growth in Trichoderma atrovirideMicrobiology, 2004
- Photomorphogenesis in the hypogeous fungus Tuber borchii: isolation and characterization of Tbwc-1, the homologue of the blue-light photoreceptor of Neurospora crassaFungal Genetics and Biology, 2004
- Colletotrichum trifolii TB3 Kinase, a COT1 Homolog, Is Light Inducible and Becomes Localized in the Nucleus during Hyphal ElongationEukaryotic Cell, 2002
- A single gene for lycopene cyclase, phytoene synthase, and regulation of carotene biosynthesis in PhycomycesProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2001
- Structure and function studies of plant cell wall polysaccharidesBiochemical Society Transactions, 1994