Looking through the eyes of fungi: molecular genetics of photoreception
Open Access
- 16 March 2007
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Wiley in Molecular Microbiology
- Vol. 64 (1) , 5-15
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2958.2007.05632.x
Abstract
Summary: Filamentous fungi respond to a variety of environmental signals. One of them is light, providing critical information about orientation, or impending stress. Cells of filamentous fungi appear to sense blue light through a unique transcription factor that has a flavin chromophore and activates its targets in a light‐dependent manner, the white collar (WC) complex. Fungal photophysiology, though, predicted a greater complexity of responses to the whole visible spectrum. The rapidly growing fungal genome database provides candidates to explain how fungi see not only blue, but also near‐UV, green and red light. At the same time, there are surprises in the genomes, including photoreceptors for which there are no obvious photoresponses. Linking these genes and their functions will help understand how a list of only a few biological chromophores accounts for such a diversity of responses. At the same time, deeper mechanistic understanding of how the WC complex functions will lead to fundamental insights at the point where the environment impinges, in this case in the form of photons, on the transcriptional machinery of the cell.Keywords
This publication has 75 references indexed in Scilit:
- TheNeurospora crassaWhite Collar-1 dependent Blue Light Response Requires Acetylation of Histone H3 Lysine 14 by NGF-1Molecular Biology of the Cell, 2006
- CKI and CKII mediate the FREQUENCY-dependent phosphorylation of the WHITE COLLAR complex to close the Neurospora circadian negative feedback loopGenes & Development, 2006
- Transcriptional Feedback of Neurospora Circadian Clock Gene by Phosphorylation-Dependent Inactivation of Its Transcription FactorCell, 2005
- Light-induced Electron Transfer in Arabidopsis Cryptochrome-1 Correlates with in Vivo FunctionPublished by Elsevier ,2005
- Light Controls Growth and Development via a Conserved Pathway in the Fungal KingdomPLoS Biology, 2005
- A blue-light-activated adenylyl cyclase mediates photoavoidance in Euglena gracilisNature, 2002
- Characterization of an opsin gene from the ascomycete Leptosphaeria maculansGenome, 2001
- The effect of UV‐A light on cAMP level in the basidiomycete Schizophyllum communePhysiologia Plantarum, 1987
- Control of Certain Diseases of Greenhouse Vegetables with Ultraviolet-Absorbing Vinyl FilmPlant Disease, 1985
- PHYTOCHROME MEDIATED CAROTENOID SYNTHESIS IN THE FUNGUS VERTICILLIUM AGARZCZNUMPhotochemistry and Photobiology, 1979