Insights into regulatory roles of MAPK-cascaded pathways in multiple stress responses and life cycles of insect and nematode mycopathogens.
Sen-Miao TongMing-Guang FengPublished in: Applied microbiology and biotechnology (2018)
Fungal entomopathogenicity may have evolved at least 200 million years later than carnivorism of nematophagous fungi on Earth. This mini-review focuses on the composition and regulatory roles of mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) cascades, which act as stress-responsive signaling pathways. Unveiled by genomic comparison, three MAPK cascades of these mycopathogens consist of singular MAPKs (Fus3/Hog1/Slt2), MAPK kinases (Ste7/Pbs2/Mkk1), and MAPK kinase kinases (Ste11/Ssk2/Bck1). All cascaded components characterized in fungal entomopathogens play conserved and special roles in regulating multiple stress responses and phenotypes associated with biological control potential. Fus3-cascaded components are indispensable for fungal growth on oligotrophic substrata and virulence, and mediate cell tolerance to Na+/K+ toxicity, which is often misinterpreted as hyperosmotic effect but readily clarified by transcriptional changes of Na+/K+ ATPase genes and/or cell responses to osmotic polyols. Hog1-cascaded components regulate osmotolerance positively and phenylpyrrole-type fungicide resistance negatively, and also play differential roles in cell growth, conidiation, virulence, and responses to other stress cues. Ste11 has no stress-responsive role in the Beauveria Hog1 cascade despite an essential role in branched yeast Hog1 cascade. Slt2-cascaded components are required for mediation of cell wall integrity and repair of cell wall damage. A crosstalk between Hog1 and Slt2 cascades ensures fungal osmotolerance inside or outside insect. In nematode-trapping fungi, Slt2 is indispensable for cell wall integrity, conidiation, and mycelial trap formation, suggesting that the Slt2 cascade could have evolved along a distinct trajectory required for fungal carnivorism and dispersal/survival in nematode habitats. Altogether, the MAPK cascades are major parts of signaling network that regulate fungal adaptation to insects and nematodes and their habitats.
Keyphrases
- cell wall
- signaling pathway
- oxidative stress
- pi k akt
- transcription factor
- escherichia coli
- single cell
- staphylococcus aureus
- induced apoptosis
- pseudomonas aeruginosa
- cell therapy
- epithelial mesenchymal transition
- depressive symptoms
- antimicrobial resistance
- cell proliferation
- stem cells
- cancer therapy
- mesenchymal stem cells
- heat stress
- dna methylation
- tyrosine kinase
- social support
- copy number
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- risk assessment