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Appl. Environ. Microbiol., Jan 1996, 191-195, Vol 62, No. 1
N Mahanti, D Bhatnagar, JW Cary, J Joubran and JE Linz
A novel gene, fas-1A, directly involved in aflatoxin B1 (AFB1)
biosynthesis, was cloned by genetic complementation of an Aspergillus
parasiticus mutant strain, UVM8, blocked at two unique sites in the AFB1
biosynthetic pathway. Metabolite conversion studies localized the two
genetic blocks to early steps in the AFB1 pathway (nor-1 and fas- 1A) and
confirmed that fas-1A is blocked prior to nor-1. Transformation of UVM8
with cosmids NorA and NorB restored function in nor-1 and fas- 1A,
resulting in synthesis of AFB1. An 8-kb SacI subclone of cosmid NorA
complemented fas-1A only, resulting in accumulation of norsolorinic acid.
Gene disruption of the fas-1A locus blocked norsolorinic acid accumulation
in A. parasiticus B62 (nor-1), which normally accumulates this
intermediate. These data confirmed that fas- 1A is directly involved in
AFB1 synthesis. The predicted amino acid sequence of fas-1A showed a high
level of identity with extensive regions in the enoyl reductase and
malonyl/palmityl transferase functional domains in the beta subunit of
yeast fatty acid synthetase. Together, these data suggest that fas-1A
encodes a novel fatty acid synthetase which synthesizes part of the
polyketide backbone of AFB1. Additional data support an interaction between
AFB1 synthesis and sclerotium development.
Copyright © 1996, American Society for Microbiology
Structure and function of fas-1A, a gene encoding a putative fatty acid synthetase directly involved in aflatoxin biosynthesis in Aspergillus parasiticus
Department of Food Science and Human Nutrition, Michigan State University, East Lansing 48824, USA.
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