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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, May 2002, p. 2148-2154, Vol. 68, No. 5
0099-2240/02/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/AEM.68.5.2148-2154.2002
Copyright © 2002, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
School of Agricultural Biotechnology and Research Center for New Bio-materials in Agriculture, Seoul National University, Suwon 441-744,1 Division of Life Sciences, Soonchunhyang University, Asan 336-745, Korea2
Received 10 December 2001/ Accepted 11 February 2002
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G. zeae may be divided into two chemotaxonomic groups based on production of 8-ketotrichothecenes (16). The deoxynivalenol (DON) chemotype produces DON and acetyl-DONs such as 3-acetyl-DON (3-ADON) and 15-acetyldeoxynivalenol (15-ADON). The nivalenol (NIV) chemotype produces NIV and 4-acetyl-NIV (4-ANIV) (also known as fusarenon-X). The two chemotypes appear to differ in geographic distribution, with both DON and NIV chemotypes reported in several countries of Africa, Asia, and Europe (10, 15, 24, 36-38) but only the DON chemotype reported in North America (1, 30). DON and NIV are frequently found in cereals harvested in some Asian countries, e.g., Korea and Japan (18, 40, 42). NIV is present at higher levels than DON in cereals from these countries.
Trichothecenes are biosynthesized in a complex pathway involving a series of oxygenation, isomerization, and esterification steps, and the molecular genetics of T-2 toxin production by Fusarium sporotrichioides have been studied intensively (9, 14). Many of the trichothecene biosynthesis genes are localized in a gene cluster of at least 10 genes. The genes in this cluster include those for trichodiene synthetase (Tri5) (12), P450 oxygenase (Tri4 and Tri11) (2, 13), acetyltransferase (Tri3 and Tri7) (5, 28), transcription factors (Tri6 and Tri10) (34, 39), a toxin efflux pump (Tri12) (3), and two unidentified hypothetical proteins (Tri8 and Tri9) (14, 29). Another acetyltransferase gene (Tri101) (20) is unlinked to the cluster. Recently, two F. sporotrichioides genes, Tri13 and Tri14, were found to be under the control of Tri10 (39), but the functions of these genes are not known. Homologs of Tri genes have been reported for G. zeae (5, 19, 22, 27, 34, 39, 41).
In a previous study (22), we analyzed the sequences of Tri genes from G. zeae DON and NIV chemotypes. Of the 10 Tri gene homologs in the Tri gene cluster, all except Tri7 were conserved; the Tri7 open reading frame (ORF) is intact in NIV chemotypes, whereas it is defective in DON chemotypes. However, there has been no clear evidence for the genetic determinants of DON and NIV in G. zeae. Brown et al. (5) compared the sequences of the Tri gene clusters from F. sporotrichioides and F. graminearum. They reported that Tri7 is required for acetylation of the oxygen on C-4 of the T-2 toxin in F. sporotrichioides and is nonfunctional in F. graminearum.
The general objective of this study was to better understand trichothecene biosynthesis by the two chemotypes of G. zeae. We reasoned that comparison of sequences within each trichothecene gene cluster would identify the determinants of DON and NIV production. The specific objectives of this study were (i) to sequence Tri13 from DON and NIV producers, (ii) to study the functions of Tri13 and Tri7, and (iii) to correlate differences in gene structure with differences in production of 8-ketotrichothecenes by the two chemotypes of G. zeae.
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DNA manipulation and PCR conditions.
Fungal genomic DNA was prepared as previously described (17). E. coli colonies carrying recombinant plasmids were screened by a single-tube miniprep method (23). For sequencing, plasmids were purified from 5-ml E. coli cultures by using a kit from Qiagen Inc. (Valencia, Calif.). Standard procedures were used for restriction endonuclease digestions, ligations, gel blot analysis, and agarose gel electrophoresis (35). The PCR primers used in this study (Table 1) were obtained from the Bioneer oligonucleotide synthesis facility (Bioneer Corporation, Chungwon, Korea), dissolved at 100 µM in sterilized water, and stored at -20°C. PCRs were performed as described previously (44).
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TABLE 1. PCR primers and plasmids used in this study
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Plasmid construction.
For insertion of Tri7 from 88-1 into the genome of H-11, a plasmid containing an intact copy of Tri7 was prepared. Tri7 was amplified from 88-1 genomic DNA by using primers Ntri7/p1 and Ntri7/p2 and cloned into pCR2.1TOPO as described above. The Tri7 insertion vector pNTri7H (9.4 kb) was then created by subcloning a 2.1-kb hygromycin B resistance gene (HygBR) taken from pBCATPH into the XbaI site of the pCR2.1TOPO-Tri7 vector described above. For deletion of Tri7 from the genome of 88-1 via double crossover, a plasmid harboring a 3.4-kb fragment carrying the 5' and 3' flanking sequences of the 88-1 Tri7 ORF was constructed. This fragment, which carried 0.9 and 2.5 kb of the 5' and 3' flanking sequences, respectively, was obtained by inverse PCR with primers Tri7n/delp1 and Tri7n/delp2, using NheI-digested and self-ligated 88-1 genomic DNA as a template. The inverse PCR product was cloned into pCR2.1TOPO along with the HygBR cassette, creating a 9.4-kb plasmid designated pdelN7H.
Plasmids used for insertion or deletion of the 88-1 Tri13 gene were prepared by the same strategies described above for Tri7. For an insertion plasmid, primers NWTri13/p1 and NWTri13/p2 were used to amplify the entire Tri13 ORF from 88-1 genomic DNA. The 3.6-kb amplified product was cloned into pCR2.1TOPO and then removed from the cloning vector by digestion with EcoRI. This EcoRI fragment was subcloned into an EcoRI site of pBCGT, which contains a gene conferring resistance to Geneticin (GenR), to create the 9.8-kb plasmid pNTri13G. To create a deletion plasmid, 88-1 genomic DNA was digested with EcoRI, self-ligated, and used as a template for inverse PCR with primers delTri13/p1 and delTri13/p2, each including a BglII recognition sequence. The PCR amplified a 2.0-kb fragment carrying the 5' and 3' flanking sequences of the 88-1 Tri13 gene. The amplified product was cleaned by phenol extraction, digested with BglII, and ligated into BglII-digested pII99-1 containing GenR and no EcoRI site. The resulting 7.3-kb plasmid was designated pdelN13G (Table 1).
Fungal transformation.
For sporulation, mycelial plugs of each strain were inoculated into CMC liquid medium (15 g of carboxylmethyl cellulose, 1 g of yeast extract, 0.5 g of MgSO4, 1 g of NH4NO3, and 1 g of KH2PO4 per liter) at 25°C with shaking (100 rpm) for 3 days. Fungal conidia produced in CMC culture were inoculated into 100 ml of YPG liquid medium (3 g of yeast extract, 10 g of peptone, and 20 g of glucose per liter) at 106 per ml and grown for 12 h with shaking at 25°C. Mycelia were harvested by filtration through sterile Whatman no. 2 filter paper and incubated in 80 ml of 1 M NH4Cl containing Driselase (10 mg/ml) (InterSpex Products, Inc., San Mateo, Calif.) to generate protoplasts. Further steps in transformation were as previously described (45). Each transformant was transferred to fresh potato dextrose agar medium amended with the desired antibiotics and purified by single-conidium isolation. For insertion of the 88-1 Tri7 or Tri13 gene, circular pNTri7H or pNTri13G was transformed into protoplasts of H-11. For gene deletions, plasmids pdelN7H and pdelN13G were linearized by digestion with NheI and EcoRI, respectively, prior to transformation.
Trichothecene analysis.
Transgenic and wild-type strains of G. zeae were screened for trichothecene production on rice medium. Rice cultures were harvested after 3 weeks of incubation at 25°C and extracted as previously described (36). A portion of each extract was reacted with trimethylsilating reagent and analyzed with a JEOL JMS-AX 505 gas chromatograph-mass spectrometer in full-scan mode using a DB-5 fused silica column (0.25 mm [inside diameter] by 30 m; 0.25-µm film) (J & W Scientific, Folsom, Calif.). The column temperature was maintained at 120°C for 5 min and then increased to 270°C at 5°C per min. The injector, ion source, and interface temperatures were 280, 200, and 250°C, respectively. The ionizing voltage was 70 eV.
Nucleotide sequence accession numbers.
The sequences of the Tri13 genes obtained from G. zeae 88-1 and H-11 have been deposited in GenBank under accession numbers AY064209 and AY064210, respectively.
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G. zeae strain H-11 carries a Tri13 homolog that is strikingly different from the Tri13 homologs of 88-1 and F. sporotrichioides. The H-11 Tri13 gene is only 65 and 61% identical to the Tri13 genes from G. zeae 88-1 and F. sporotrichioides, respectively. In addition, alignment of these nucleotide sequences reveals many alterations present only in the H-11 gene. This gene appears to have incurred several substitutions, insertions, and deletions, causing a deficient translation start and frameshifts in the putative TRI13 amino acid sequence. Nucleotide alignment of Tri13 fragments amplified from genomic DNAs of other G. zeae isolates revealed that these features found in H-11 Tri13 are highly conserved among DON-producing isolates of the G. zeae strains tested from Korea and the United States (data not shown).
Molecular manipulations of Tri7 and Tri13. (i) Deletion of either the Tri7 or Tri13 ORF from the G. zeae genome.
The region containing the entire Tri7 ORF or an internal portion of the Tri13 ORF in the genome of strain 88-1 was deleted by targeted gene replacement using linearized pdelN7H and pdelN13G, respectively, via double crossover between homologous regions (Fig. 1A and B). The desired transformants sustaining a deletion of either Tri7 or Tri13 were identified by gel blot analysis (Fig. 1C and D). In transformants TxN
7-2, TxN
7-3, TxN
7-4, and TxN
7-5, a single 9.4-kb band (in lieu of a 5.4-kb native band) was observed to hybridize with a Tri7 probe, indicating that a 2.0-kb region including the entire Tri7 ORF was deleted and replaced with the vector pdelN7H (Fig. 1A and C). The transformants TxN
13-1, TxN
13-2, and TxN
13-3 contained the intact Tri7 ORF but carried a 520-bp deletion of the Tri13 ORF, which was replaced with the vector pdelN13G (Fig. 1B and D).
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FIG. 1. Schemes for deletion of either Tri7 or Tri13 from the genome of G. zeae 88-1 (A and B) and gel blots of genomic DNAs from Tri7 (C) and Tri13 (D) deletion transformants digested with NheI and EcoRI, respectively. (A and B) Probes used for hybridization are marked as cross-hatched. N, NheI; E, EcoRI; AmpR, ampicillin resistance gene; KanR, kanamycin resistance gene; HygBR, hygromycin B resistance gene; GenR, geneticin resistance gene. (C) Lane 1, lambda DNA cut with HindIII; lane 2, wild-type 88-1; lanes 3 to 7, Tri7 deletion strains of 88-1, TxN 7-1, TxN 7-2, TxN 7-3, TxN 7-4, and TxN 7-5, respectively; lane 8, transformant TxN 7-6 carrying the transforming vector at an ectopic site. (D) Lane 1, lambda DNA cut with HindIII; lane 2, wild-type 88-1; lanes 3 to 5, Tri13 deletion strains of 88-1 , TxN 13-1, TxN 13-2, and TxN 13-3, respectively; lane 6, transformant TxN 13-4 carrying the transforming vector at an ectopic site. Band sizes in kilobases are marked with arrows on the left.
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The probe, a 3.6-kb EcoRI fragment from pNTri13G carrying the 88-1 Tri13 ORF, hybridized with genomic DNAs from all HygBS GenR transformants tested. In EcoRI-digested genomic DNAs of transformants TxN13-2 and TxN13-3, the 3.6-kb fragment of the heterologous Tri13 ORF hybridized along with a 2.5-kb fragment of the native Tri13, indicating that the intact 88-1 Tri13 ORF integrated at an ectopic site of the recipient genome (Fig. 2A). In EcoRI-digested genomic DNAs from all HygBR GenS transformants tested, a 3.4-kb probe carrying the 88-1 Tri7 ORF hybridized with a single 3.6-kb fragment of the heterologous Tri7 but not with a native Tri7, probably because the probe shared only 80% nucleotide identity with the native Tri7 (data not shown). The same probe identified HygBR GenR transformants carrying both intact 88-1 Tri7 and Tri13 ORFs at ectopic sites that were created by retransformation of transformant TxN13-2 with pNTri7H (Fig. 2B).
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FIG. 2. DNA gel blots of EcoRI-digested genomic DNAs from G. zeae H-11 transformants carrying heterologous Tri13 alone (A) or both Tri13 and Tri7 (B). (A) A 3.6-kb EcoRI fragment containing the entire Tri13 ORF of 88-1 was used as a probe. Lane 1, lambda-HindIII markers; lanes 2 and 3, wild-type H-11 showing a 2.5-kb native Tri13 band; lane 4, transformant TxN13 containing a truncated copy of the 88-1 Tri13 gene; lanes 5 and 6, transformants TxN13-2 and TxN13-3, each carrying an intact copy of the 88-1 Tri13 gene. (B) Transformants carrying both the 88-1 Tri13 and Tri7 genes were obtained by retransformation of TxN13-2 with pNTri7H. The probe was a 3.4-kb PCR product containing the entire Tri7 gene of 88-1. Lane 1, lambda-HindIII markers; lane 2, wild-type H-11; lanes 3 to 6, TxN713-1, TxN713-2, TxN713-3, and TxN713-4, respectively (transformants carrying an intact copy of the 88-1 Tri7 gene). Band sizes in kilobases are marked with arrows on the left.
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FIG. 3. Total ion chromatograms of extracts of G. zeae cultures. (A) Wild-type 88-1; (B) wild-type H-11; (C) transgenic 88-1 with Tri7 deleted (TxN 7-1); (D) transgenic 88-1 carrying an ectopic integration of pdelN7H (TxN 7-6); (E) transgenic 88-1 with Tri13 deleted (TxN 13-1); (F) transgenic 88-1 carrying an ectopic integration of pdelN13G (TxN 13-4); (G) transgenic H-11 carrying Tri13 from 88-1 (TxN13-2); (H) transgenic H-11 carrying both Tri13 and Tri7 from 88-1 (TxN713-1).
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(ii) Transgenic G. zeae H-11 strains carrying heterologous Tri7 and/or Tri13 ORFs.
G. zeae H-11 produced DON and 15-ADON in rice cultures (Fig. 3B). Transgenic G. zeae strains of H-11 carrying intact copies of the 88-1 Tri7 ORF produced DON and 15-ADON similarly to wild-type H-11 (data not shown). However, heterologous expression of the 88-1 Tri13 ORF in the genetic background of H-11 caused changes in trichothecene production. GC-MS analysis showed that transgenic H-11 strains carrying the 88-1 Tri13 ORF produced only NIV; neither 4-ANIV nor DON was produced (Fig. 3G). Furthermore, transgenic H-11 strains carrying intact copies of both the 88-1 Tri7 and Tri13 ORFs produced both NIV and 4-ANIV (Fig. 3H).
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The functions of Tri7 and Tri13 in trichothecene production by G. zeae have not yet been conclusively determined. To confirm their functions, we employed molecular manipulations, including gene deletion and insertions, as described in this study. When the Tri13 gene in the NIV-producing G. zeae strain 88-1 was deleted, DON, instead of NIV, was detected in rice cultures. This result indicates that the TRI13 protein is responsible for the oxygenation at C-4 during synthesis of NIV. In addition, heterologous expression of the functional copy of Tri13 in the genetic background of the DON chemotype H-11 showed that Tri13 is sufficient for conversion from DON production to NIV production in transgenic H-11 strains.
The same molecular strategies were used to confirm that the G. zeae TRI7 protein is involved in acetylation of the oxygen at C-4 of NIV, as in F. sporotrichioides (5). Heterologous expression of both the Tri13 and Tri7 genes in H-11 caused production of both NIV and 4-ANIV. Therefore, these functional analyses have confirmed that the Tri13 gene is the determinant for the DON-NIV switching in G. zeae and that the Tri7 gene is responsible for further modification of NIV. Further confirmation of the enzymatic activities of these proteins and their roles in trichothecene biosynthesis awaits detailed biochemical studies.
Transgenic strains produced toxins in quantities similar to those produced by recipient strains, although the kinds of trichothecenes were switched with respect to each other. H-11 produced approximately 5 times more trichothecenes than did 88-1. Transgenic H-11 carrying the 88-1 Tri13 gene produced more NIV than did wild-type 88-1. The amount of DON produced by transgenic 88-1 with Tri13 deleted was much less than that produced by the wild-type H-11. Studies of field isolates also revealed higher levels of DON production by DON chemotypes than of NIV production by NIV chemotypes (36). This difference may be attributed to differences in regulatory factors such as the Tri6 and Tri10 genes (34, 39) and/or in another quantitative genetic element(s).
In addition to functional studies, the transgenic strains created in this study will be useful in evaluating the relative contributions of the two types of trichothecenes in G. zeae pathogenesis toward cereals. Previous studies using a DON-deficient G. zeae mutant showed that DON was responsible for reduced virulence by G. zeae toward wheat (29, 33). However, the role of NIV in the virulence of G. zeae has not been quantitatively analyzed, although NIV is known to be less phytotoxic than DON (11). Combinations of isogenic strains differing only in trichothecene production, such as 88-1 and a transgenic 88-1 Tri13 deletion strain or H-11 and a transgenic H-11 strain carrying the 88-1 Tri13 gene, would be appropriate for these studies.
All DON chemotype isolates of G. zeae examined thus far carry defective sequences for both Tri7 and Tri13, which raises two questions regarding the population of G. zeae in Korea. First, is the presence of both defective genes in the trichothecene gene clusters common to all DON-producing isolates? Based on our functional studies, which suggest that Tri7 is not directly involved in DON-NIV switching, we can expect to find NIV- and DON-producing isolates of G. zeae that carry functional Tri13 but not Tri7 genes and functional Tri7 but not Tri13 genes, respectively. In the former case, the isolate should not be able to produce 4-ANIV because it has a defective Tri7 gene. The latter case may be rare, because a functional Tri7 gene may be dispensable, and thus mutations could accumulate. A PCR assay using primers derived from Tri7 (22) and Tri13 designed to reveal polymorphisms between the two chemotypes would be useful in testing these possibilities. This PCR assay would also provide a more reliable method to determine the chemotypes of G. zeae field isolates.
The second question is whether polymorphisms in Tri7 and Tri13 between DON and NIV chemotypes reflect the genetic diversity of Korean G. zeae populations. No polymorphisms were found in the gene clusters including Tri7 and Tri13 among the Korean NIV-producing isolates tested (unpublished data). In contrast, in the DON-producing isolates, the gene clusters differed at the two Tri genes. Significant conservation of this structural difference between the Tri gene clusters in the two chemotypes would suggest the presence of chemotype-specific lineages in Korea. According to the description by O'Donnell et al. (32), a preliminary study showed that Korean G. zeae populations from barley were dominated by a single lineage (lineage 6) and that those from maize were dominated by lineage 7, but lineage 3 was a relatively common component (K. A. Zeller, J. I. Vargas, Y.-W. Lee, R. L. Bowden, and J. F. Leslie, Abstr. National Fusarium Head Blight Forum, abstr. 163, 2001). It is likely that at least lineages 6 and 7 in Korean populations are specific to the NIV and DON chemotypes, respectively. Confirmation of this hypothesis will require a phylogenetic study of Korean G. zeae populations.
We thank T. Tsuge, Nagoya University, Nagoya, Japan, for providing plasmid pII99.
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