ambruticin has been researched along with fludioxonil* in 2 studies
2 other study(ies) available for ambruticin and fludioxonil
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A novel functional assay for fungal histidine kinases group III reveals the role of HAMP domains for fungicide sensitivity.
Signal transduction systems comprising histidine kinases are suggested as new molecular targets of antibiotics. The important human fungal pathogen Candida albicans possesses three histidine kinases, one of which is the type III histidine kinase CaNik1, which activates the MAP kinase Hog1. We established a screening system for inhibitors of this class of histidine kinases by functional expression of the CaNIK1 gene in S. cerevisiae. This transformant was susceptible to fungicides to which the wild type strain was resistant, such as fludioxonil and ambruticin. Growth inhibition correlated with phosphorylation of Hog1 and was dependent on an intact Hog1 pathway. At the N-terminus the histidine kinase CaNik1 has four amino acid repeats of 92 amino acids each and one truncated repeat of 72 amino acids. Within these repeats we identified 9 HAMP domains with a paired structure. We constructed mutants in which one or two pairs of these domains were deleted. S. cerevisiae transformants expressing the full-length CaNIK1 showed the highest sensitivity to the fungicides, any truncation reduced the susceptibility of the transformants to the fungicides. This indicates that the HAMP domains are decisive for the mode of action of the antifungal compounds. Topics: Amino Acid Motifs; Amino Acid Sequence; Antifungal Agents; Candida albicans; Dioxoles; Drug Resistance, Fungal; Fungal Proteins; Histidine Kinase; Microbial Sensitivity Tests; Mitogen-Activated Protein Kinases; Molecular Sequence Data; Phosphorylation; Protein Kinase Inhibitors; Protein Kinases; Pyrans; Pyrroles; Recombinant Proteins; Saccharomyces cerevisiae; Saccharomyces cerevisiae Proteins; Sequence Alignment; Sequence Deletion; Signal Transduction; Stress, Physiological | 2012 |
The group III two-component histidine kinase of filamentous fungi is involved in the fungicidal activity of the bacterial polyketide ambruticin.
We have shown that the plant pathogen Alternaria brassicicola exhibited very high susceptibility to ambruticin VS4 and to a lesser extent to the phenylpyrrole fungicide fludioxonil. These compounds are both derived from natural bacterial metabolites with antifungal properties and are thought to exert their toxicity by interfering with osmoregulation in filamentous fungi. Disruption of the osmosensor group III histidine kinase gene AbNIK1 (for A. brassicola NIK1) resulted in high levels of resistance to ambruticin and fludioxonil, while a mutant isolate characterized by a single-amino-acid substitution in the HAMP domain of the kinase only exhibited moderate resistance. Moreover, the natural resistance of Saccharomyces cerevisiae to these antifungal molecules switched to sensitivity in strains expressing AbNIK1p. We also showed that exposure to fludioxonil and ambruticin resulted in abnormal phosphorylation of a Hog1-like mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) in A. brassicicola. Parallel experiments carried out with wild-type and mutant isolates of Neurospora crassa revealed that, in this species, ambruticin susceptibility was dependent on the OS1-RRG1 branch of the phosphorelay pathway downstream of the OS2 MAPK cascade but independent of the yeast Skn7-like response regulator RRG2. These results show that the ability to synthesize a functional group III histidine kinase is a prerequisite for the expression of ambruticin and phenylpyrrole susceptibility in A. brassicicola and N. crassa and that, at least in the latter species, improper activation of the high-osmolarity glycerol-related pathway could explain their fungicidal properties. Topics: Alternaria; Amino Acid Substitution; Antifungal Agents; Dioxoles; Gene Deletion; Genetic Complementation Test; Histidine Kinase; Mutagenesis, Insertional; Mutation, Missense; Neurospora crassa; Protein Kinases; Pyrans; Pyrroles; Saccharomyces cerevisiae | 2009 |