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Identification of Genes Promoting Growth of Ustilago maydis on Biomolecules Released from Cells Killed by Oxidation.

Jelena MalesevicMilorad KojicStefan StanovcicNatalija AzanjacMira Milisavljević
Published in: Journal of fungi (Basel, Switzerland) (2022)
Much headway has been made in understanding the numerous strategies that enable microorganisms to counteract various types of environmental stress, but little is known about how microbial populations recover after a massive death caused by exposure to extreme conditions. Using the yeast-like fungus Ustilago maydis as a model, our recent post-stress regrowth under starvation (RUS) studies have demonstrated that this organism reconstitutes devastated populations with remarkable efficiency. Subsequently, we have identified four RUS-gene products. Two of these, Did4 and Tbp1, play parallel roles in protecting the genome. To identify additional molecular components, we took a molecular-genetic and a transcriptomic approach. By employing a simple and novel screening method, we identified five RUS-deficient mutants ( snf8 , slm1 , vrg4 , snf5 , hsf1 ), three of which ( snf8 , slm1 , and hsf1 ) displayed sensitivity to different genotoxic agents, indicating that the corresponding gene products have roles in genome protection. The global transcriptomic changes of cells grown in supernatants derived from peroxide-treated cell suspensions revealed sets of uniquely expressed genes. Importantly, among the genes induced by the substrates was Chk1 , which encodes a protein kinase required for checkpoint-mediated cell cycle arrest in response to DNA damage. Mutants of U. maydis deleted of Chk1 are severely incapacitated in RUS.
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